By Adnan Adams Mohammed
Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin warns against finite mining reliance, urging focus on lasting regional infrastructure and enterprise.
The Government of Ghana has taken steps to formally integrate the Upper East Region’s newly launched 10-Year PEARL Framework into the country’s central development planning system, signaling a structural shift toward sustainable, diversified regional growth.
The policy alignment, announced following the official unveiling of the framework, aims to ensure that the development initiatives designed for the Upper East Region are backed by national statutory frameworks and fiscal support.
The 10-Year PEARL (Prosperous, Equitable, Accelerated, Resilient, and Localised) Framework outlines a blueprint to pivot the region away from a singular focus on mineral extraction toward long-term investments in human capital, mechanized agriculture, and industrial enterprise.
Mining Is a Temporary Cure, Not a Permanent Strategy
Speaking at the high-profile launch on Monday, the Speaker of Parliament, Rt. Hon. Alban Bagbin, delivered a strongly worded caution to policymakers and regional leaders against relying on mining as the bedrock of long-term economic stability.
“The question before us is therefore not whether the Upper East Region possesses valuable mineral resources,” Bagbin stated in a speech read on his behalf. “The more important question is whether those resources will become the foundation for lasting prosperity, or whether the mineral resources will be a curse or a cure to our economic malaise.”
Bagbin highlighted the historical vulnerabilities faced by resource-rich territories globally, noting that many have been left ecologically degraded and economically hollowed out once extractable deposits run dry.
“Mining is a temporary opportunity, not a permanent development strategy,” the Speaker emphasized. “The true wealth of this region will not ultimately be measured by the minerals extracted from beneath the bowels of the soil, but by the enduring assets created above it, such as productive agriculture, thriving industries, resilient infrastructure, skilled citizens, vibrant enterprises, and strong institutions.”
National Integration for Localized Progress
The decision by the central government to absorb the PEARL objectives into the national framework aims to address a common developmental bottleneck in Ghana: localized strategic plans losing momentum due to a lack of institutional alignment and national budgetary commitment.
By integrating the PEARL initiatives, state agencies, including the National Development Planning Commission (NDPC) and the Ministry of Finance, can systematically allocate resources to scale up the region’s localized priorities.
Development experts attending the launch praised the framework’s focus on converting volatile, short-term mineral revenues into fixed economic foundations. Regional planners intend to utilize mineral royalties to aggressively fund modernized irrigation systems, climate-resilient transport corridors, and vocational training centers tailored to the evolving job market.
A Call for Wisdom and Stewardship
As the Upper East Region stands at a developmental crossroads, heavily courted by large-scale and artisanal mining interests alike, leaders are urging a mindset shift that prioritizes the welfare of future generations.
Reflecting on the historical significance of the newly adopted policy direction, Speaker Bagbin challenged stakeholders to exercise rigorous economic stewardship.
“The challenge is whether [the region] possesses the wisdom to convert temporary wealth into permanent prosperity,” Bagbin noted. He added that future generations should remember this specific era not for the volume of minerals extracted from the earth, but for how effectively that extraction financed a modern, independent, and diversified regional economy.
