President Akufo-Addo is expected to leave Ghana on Sunday, May 16 for a nine-day official working visit to France, Belgium and South Africa.
These working visits are part of the efforts the President is making to re-engage with the rest of the world, following the onset of the pandemic, and highlight Ghana, once again, as a country with an impressive business-friendly atmosphere, with bright economic prospects for the future.
President Akufo-Addo will, first of all, attend a Summit on Financing African Economies in Paris on Tuesday, May 18 at the invitation of the French President, Emmanuel Macron.
The Summit, which will bring together several African and European leaders, and heads of international financial institutions, will devise strategies that will boost strong, inclusive recovery in Africa, grounded in a dynamic private sector, help foster sustainable progress and prosperity, and accelerate the green and digital transition in line with the 2030 UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
In the wake of the devastating effects Covid-19 has had on the economies of all countries in the world, Africa, in particular, has been the hardest hit – having been in a recession last year, and its estimated economic recovery growth rate of 3.7% for 2021 well below the global economic recovery rate of 5.5%.
This, according to many economic and financial experts, could worsen even further the problems of poverty and inequality for many Africans, a situation which leaders on the continent are keen to avoid.
It is expected that a financial package will be devised to enable African countries overcome the economic impact of the Covid crisis.
Whilst in Paris, President Akufo-Addo is scheduled to have bilateral discussions with the President of the World
The President will, in turn, meet with the President of the European Investment Bank (EIB), Dr. Werner Hoyer, and participate in the ceremony for the signing of a €160 million facility between EIB and the Ministry of Finance, towards the establishment of the National Development Bank.
He will attend an investor conference in Brussels on Ghana, and also hold a meeting with Ms. Jutta Urpilainen, the EU Commissioner on International Co-operation, to discuss issues relating to the COVAX Facility, which is currently supplying Covid-19 vaccines to the country.
On the last leg of his tour, President Akufo-Addo will, at the invitation of the Speaker, address the Fourth Ordinary Session of the Fifth Parliament of the Pan-African Parliament (PAP), scheduled to take place on Monday, May 24, in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Deliberations of this Session will be guided by the African Union (AU) theme for 2021: ‘Year of the Arts, Culture and Heritage: Levers for Building the Africa We Want’.’
Bank, and the Managing Director of the IMF, who will both be attending the Summit.
President Akufo-Addo will, from Wednesday, May 16, at the invitation of the President of the European Council, H.E. M. Charles Michel, be in Brussels, Belgium, to hold bilateral talks with the President and officials of the European Council, and meet with stakeholders committed to the partnership between Ghana and the European Union.
The talks between the President and President Charles Michel are expected to center on regional security, as well as on sustainability issues in the cocoa and fisheries sectors of Ghana, and their impact on relations between Ghana and the European Union.
President Akufo-Addo will be accompanied by the Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Minister for Finance, and officials of the Presidency and the Foreign and Finance Ministries.
He will be joined in Brussels by the Minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture Development, the Minister for Food and Agriculture, and the Chief Executive Officer of Ghana Cocoa Board.
He is expected to return to Ghana on Tuesday, May 25.
By Emmanuel Kwame Amoh