Ghana’s
mid year population is now estimated at 27.9 million, up from the 24.
Million recorded in the 2012 National Population and Housing Census,
Chief Statistician at the Statistical Service, David Y. Kombat, has
disclosed.
He told The Ghanaian Times in an interview yesterday
that the Statistical Service was worried that some people in high public
offices continued to quote the 20109 population figures, which could
mislead people into formulating policies based on old figures.
Mr.
Kombat, who is also the Director of Communications and Dissemination,
said the projected annual growth rate of the country’s population rate
was 2.5 percent, which put the population at 27.9 million, from the last
census, adding that people should consult the service for update of the
population figures.
He stressed the need for accuracy in the use
of population figures to be able to formulate and implement policies
based on credible data, adding “We should always update our figures,
they will make people plan based on wrong data.”
He said the
service had trained some District Planning Officers on the Information
Management System software which would enable them to generate
demographic data for planning purposes.
“We expect these planning
officers to generate current data on the population so that we do not
use the 2012 figures for planning when we have grown by five years,” Mr.
Kombat said.
The Chief Statistician expressed concern about the
frequent changes of planning officers to other areas to do activities in
different fields saying that it undermines the use of their expertise
and kills in development planning.
Mr. Kombat was also concerned
about the fact that some of those officers were being poached by other
institutions by offering them better conditions of service, and lamented
the loss of core skills at the decentralized governance level.
Touching
on other things, the Chief Statistician said the service was in the
process of undertaking the second phase of the Integrated Business
Establishment Survey (IBES) to generate more data on industrial
establishment in the country, adding that the first phase survey
conducted in 2014, was being analyzed.
Mr. Kombat said very
little data on non-industrial establishment had been collected in the
country, explaining that the results of the first phase was expected to
provide information on the structure and performance of the various
sectors.
That, he said, would assist in the formulation of
policies to accelerate economic growth, and also generate more awareness
in the nature of productive activities in the micro, small and medium
enterprises to serve as basis for provision of assistance to those
enterprises which had a great potential for generating employment. |
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