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Trade Minister hasn’t engaged us on L.I. to regulate prices – Cement producers

By Laud Nartey
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3 min read
Trade Minister hasn’t engaged us on L.I. to regulate prices – Cement producers

The Executive Secretary of the  Cement Manufacturers Association of Ghana (CMAG) Rev. Dr. George Dawson-Ahmoah has told the Trade Minister K T Hammond that they do not need a Legislative Instrument to regulate cement prices.

Rev. Dr. George Dawson-Ahmoah further stated that they have not been consulted on the L.I. He asked the Minister to seek their views on it.

“Why is the Minister avoiding or just running away from this discussion? Previously, our position has been that these prices of  cement, the increase of prices of  cement, it is not done in a vacuum. It is not done just because we wake up in the morning and do it,”  he said.

For him, the increasing prices of cement can be attributed to the fall of the Cedi against the dollar.

https://editors.3news.com/featured/there-must-be-some-sanity-in-the-system-kt-hammond-justifies-l-i-to-regulate-cement-prices/

“It is as a result of a negative trend in the economy, which is warranting such increases, and that is the issue. And like I said, what is happening now with cement prices is just because of the rapid and consistent depreciation of the cedi against the foreign currencies.

“We don’t know anything about it. And with my common knowledge in legislative instruments, don’t you involve stakeholders before it gets to Parliament? Don’t you involve stakeholders in the process?” he quizzed on Tuesday.

But KT Hammond told journalists in Parliament on Wednesday, June 26 that he had engaged them.

“I asked them to ensure that something was done about it. In my absence, I was told that the minister wasn’t going to be able to do anything.

“They would not listen, they wouldn’t do it, and they would go the way they want. “Encouraging them to do it is a moral persuasion. If moral persuasion fails, there is a system in the country, there’s a constitution, and we are preyed by a rule of law. If we don’t accept the moral principle, at least some sort of economic principle, the good people of Ghana must benefit. I don’t think it is fair for the way they are pricing and the way, haphazardly each one of them decides and dictates how much a bag of cement should be sold for.

https://editors.3news.com/featured/cement-prices-it-behooves-on-us-in-authority-to-ensure-ghanaians-arent-fleeced-trade-minister/

“This is quite apart from the quality that they are producing. Some of the companies are producing substandard products. We have had to deal with this matter,” he said.

An attempt to lay the document in Parliament on Tuesday, June 26, was blocked by the Minority.

The opposition lawmakers insisted the L.I. must first be discussed.

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Laud Nartey is an online editor with current affair team at Media General, operators of TV3 Ghana, 3News.com and more. Email: Laud.Nartey@editors.3news.com

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