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Kayeyi Empowerment Programme: a lip service or poverty alleviation programme?

The Kayeyei Empowerment Programme, which aims to provide thorough training to head porters, also known locally as “kayeyei,” in order to move them from street labour to skilled employment, was officially launched yesterday by Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, Vice President of Ghana.

It is anticipated that this project will have a major positive economic impact on the participants as well as the larger Ghanaian economy.

First off, the initiative gives about 5,000 kayeyei access to vocational training, giving them skills in beading and jewellery making, soap and detergent manufacturing, makeup artistry, pedicures, manicures, and nails, baking, décor, dressmaking, and other vocations that are marketable.

By developing their skill sets, these women can find better-paying, more steady occupations and generate work for others, increasing their economic independence and lowering poverty rates within this vulnerable demographic.

Furthermore, the empowerment program includes the construction of hostels in the Accra suburbs of Madina and Ashaiman, Kumasi, and Techiman to be commissioned. These buildings are equipped with training rooms, dormitories, pantries, a kitchen, a clinic, washrooms, fire extinguishers, CCTV, 24/7 security, a food shed, etc.

These establishments offer training facilities in addition to safe living, fostering an atmosphere that is favourable to education and individual growth. This infrastructure investment can stimulate local economies through increased demand for goods and services, creating a multiplier effect that benefits surrounding communities.

The initiative additionally seeks to lessen the socioeconomic burdens on urban areas by tackling the underlying causes of unemployment and urban poverty among Kayeyei.

It can promote a more secure and prosperous urban environment by reducing crime rates and reliance on social services. By bringing a historically underrepresented workforce into the formal sector, this all-encompassing strategy benefits individual kayeyei while also bolstering economic growth as a whole.

Appreciation to the following individuals and organisations for their hard work in making this initiative a success: Dr. Kwasi Nyame-Baafi, office of the Vice President’s, Getfund, Ghana Enterprise Agency (GEA), Youth Employment Agency (YEA), National Entrepreneurship and Innovation Programme (NEIP), and CTVET.

In conclusion, by promoting economic participation, enhancing living conditions, and offering skill training, the Kayeyei Empowerment Program is well-positioned to have a major positive economic impact.

Indeed, this program is not a lip service, as claimed and hoped by naysayers when the Vice President made the promise some months ago, but an example of a calculated investment in human resources that can propel Ghana’s economy toward long-term prosperity.

These same naysayers, when in government, distributed head pans to the same Kayeyes to motivate their marginalized trade instead of enrolling in a poverty alleviation program.

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