Credible information reaching the news desk of www.233times.net confirms that Dr. Kwesi Botchwey is settled on by President John Dramani Mahama as the Vice President of Ghana. This is followed after former Vice President, John Dramani Mahama was shuffled to the height of Presidential position after the Commander-in-Chief of Ghana’s Armed Forces, Late President John Evans Fiifi Atta Mills kicked the bucket.
Though not publicly declared by the President that Kwesi Botchwey is the new Vice President, www.233times.net had this information from a close contact of the new administration.
www.233times.net congratulates Dr. Kwesi Botchwey for his new position.
Biography Of Kwesi Botchwey:
Kwesi Botchwey is a Ghanaian former government official and Professor of Practice in Development Economics at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy of Tufts University.
Botchwey was Ghana’s Minister of Finance from 1982 to 1995. He was appointed by Jerry Rawlings to assist in stabilizing Ghana’s collapsed economy.
Botchwey holds an LL.B. from the University of Ghana, a LL.M from Yale Law School, and a doctorate from the University of Michigan Law School. He taught at the University of Zambia, the University of Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) and the University of Ghana.
Other Notable Previous Assignments
• Advisor to the World Bank on the 1997 World Development Report
• Member and Chairman of IMF’s Group of Independent Experts who conducted the first ever external evaluation of the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility
• Advisor to the UNDP’s UN Special Initiative on Africa
• Advisor to the European Centre for Development Policy and Management (ECDPM)
Publications
“Transforming the Periphery: A study of the struggle of social forces in Ghana for democracy and national sovereignty”, United Nations publication, 1981 (ISBN 92-808-0309-3; ISSN 0379-5772) DSDRSCA-83/UNUO-309
“Obstacles to Centralized Reform: An African Perspective” in Deepening Structural Reform in Africa, Lessons from East Asia, ed. Laura Wallace, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC, 1996.
Implementing Debt Relief for the HIPCs,” (co-author), Center for International Development, Harvard (1999).
“Wither the Partnership Agenda in Development Cooperation: A Country perspective,” 4th Conference on Evaluation and Development, World Bank (2001)
“The New Partnership for Africa’s Economic Development: Internal and External Visions,” NEPAD: Internal and External Visions and Influences (2003);
Current and Past Projects
Member & Convener Team of academics from Yale, Oxford, and the Free University of Amsterdam that conducted and has just finished the first External evaluation at the request of the Executive Board of the IMF, of the Fund’s Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF).
Member Commonwealth Group of Eminent Persons for the Facilitation of the Signing of the Uruguay Round of Gatt Negotiations.
Member OECD group of high-level experts for the review of the OECD study on “Globalization and Linkages to 2020: Challenges and Opportunities for OECD countries (1996).
Member Commonwealth Expert Group on Good Governance and the Elimination of Corruption in Economic Management
Member Panel of High Level Personalities on African Development – an advisory group established to assist the UN Secretary-General in advocating greater support for African development and in coordinating the UN system’s activities in the region.
Papers and Speeches Given at Conferences
• “HIV/AIDS and Economic Development in Africa” Theme Paper, African Development Forum, Economic Commission For Africa, December 2000
• “Magnitude and Drivers of the Brain Drain in Africa” Keynote Address at the 1999 Africa Business Conference, Harvard University January 30, 1999.
• “Growth and Poverty Alleviation in Africa”, ODC Conference on African Economic Recovery, 1996.
• “Deepening Structural Adjustment Reforms and Policies for Growth in Africa”, May 1996.
• “Growth and Poverty Alleviation”, ODC Conference on African Economic Recovery, June 11-12, 1996.
• “Globalization: What has it meant for Africa and what does the future portend?” Presented at the Seminar on International Solidarity and Globalization: In Search of New Strategies, Stockholm, 1997.
• “The Role of the State, the Ministry of Finance and the Treasury Secretary in the context of Economic Liberalization and Globalization”, Abidjan, June 1998.
• “The Politics of Administrative Reform”, World Bank, June 1998.
• “Mobilizing capital flows in support of accelerated African development – the role of capital markets”, Washington, DC, July 1998
Author: Nana Kwesi Coomson (www.233times.net)