There
should not be any dichotomy between planning and implementation, he said.
Mr.
Azongo has bemoaned the persisting culture of contracting experts to lead the planning
phase of national projects, yet allow others to proceed with implementation without
engaging the planners.
He
says such practice allows the architect of these plans to escape
accountability, adding that the “poverty of implementation” results in the non-attainment
of expected impacts of plans.
“The
architects of the plans would often exit the documentation phase of the plan
and when it comes to the ground engineering aspect of the plan, they leave it
to others who have very little knowledge about the documentation in terms of
the content and the direction of implementation,” observed the planner.
Ghana
prides in devising excellent plans and policies to drive socio-economic
development but often fails in implementing such plans.
Mr.
Azongo believes plans should not be determined by the quality of documentation
but implementation outcomes.
“Development
is a product of planning,” he noted. “Ultimately, we’ll have to rely on our planning
regime to be able to generate the kind of development we all wish to see”.
Mr.
Azongo therefore advocates that the architects of plans for government projects
need to be part of the implementation team to achieve better outcomes.
The
planning-implementation duality has only succeeded in creating an escape route
for professional laxity, making documentation phase of planning an exit- route
comfort industry, he observed.
As
consultant to Suame Magazine Industrial Development Organization (SMIDO), Mr.
Azongo planned an initiative to secur a 1000acre land and a Gh₵10million private
funding arrangement to implement the first phase of the SMIDO industrial
complex project.
The
project is a transformational resettlement scheme for artisans of Suame
Magazine contained in SMIDO’s Policy Blueprint designed by the consultant in
2007.
The
Suame Magazine Industrial Development fund (SMID Fund) has been launched to
drive funding for the project.
Mr.
Azongo has emphasized that there can only be a case of a good plan or bad plan
and not the split-sided barometer Ghana has been constantly fed with.
He
posited that “if preparing a plan is seen as rocket-science professional
enterprise, then matching it on the ground cannot just be said to be the
responsibility of others without its architect as the leading marksman to
facilitate the process towards its realization”.
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