Editorial

Contain unbridled population growth!!

Population growth ev­erywhere has implications for the general life of the affected area.

That is to say every sector of the life of the area would have some advantages, if the society plans for the growth, or chaos would set in where there is no planning to contain the growth.

Therefore, the information put out by the University of Ghana Regional Institute of Population Studies (RIPS) that Ghana’s population is projected to increase by 20 million by 2050 should be treated by the state as a call to prepare for the situation.

No one should mince words to say that Ghana is a place where successive governments have failed to plan for sustainable life across the country.

A critical look at what govern­ments over the last 40 years, for instance, have done are mostly projects they can immediately gain personal financial benefits from and as well trumpet them to attract votes to retain them in power.

Amenities like schools, hos­pitals, roads and so-described affordable housing are good but check their spread or distribution.

According to the RIPS, the country’s population of 30.8 million in 2021 has grown to 33, 007, 618 million currently and by that growth rate the figure will hit about 53 million in the next 26 years.

Since the population structure comprises children, the youth and the aged, the needs of these categories of people obviously would increase.

What is happening currently with the 33 million people is overwhelming and so we can envisage a worse situation with 53 million; hence the status quo must change for a planning for sustainable life in the country.

Such planning must take criti­cal look at the current challenges and find solutions to them as it is done elsewhere.

The first step is to look at all the factors that drive the unbri­dled population growth in the country, which are fanned by the country’s culture of the people desiring many children.

The saying that once you have the means you can have any number of children is outdated and must be dealt with in order to limit related repercussions on the whole society.

Mauritius, for instance, at a time in its history, used improved female educational status and ac­tive family planning programmes to ensure a decline in population growth.

What tools can Ghana use?

Yes, everyone can talk about such solutions as creating jobs for the youth, providing more in­frastructure and social amenities, but it appears these solutions are proffered without much thought about the factor that can allow for them – land.

The poor land management obtaining in the country makes even a slim growth in population risky to sustainable life here.

Everything points to the fact that there are no reserved places for amenities in communities and for farming, and spatial planning is worse.

It is sad that even new com­munities not controlled by estate developers lack roads and other thoroughfares and what is more worrying is that planning is more horizontal than vertical, which means there is no maximum use of the land in the building sector in particular.

It is more important now than ever before that the government itself must take population growth and its repercussions more seriously and do all it can to inculcate that same serious­ness in the people to contain the unbridled population growth and its negative impacts that can undermine sustainable life in the country.

Show More
Back to top button