Tag: Presidential Delivery Unit

  • THE PARTNER-IN-CHIEF: Julius Debrah wins high marks from business community for pro-market governance

    THE PARTNER-IN-CHIEF: Julius Debrah wins high marks from business community for pro-market governance

    By Adnan Adams Mohammed

     

    Within West Africa’s corporate suites and investor circles, the intersection of political governance and private enterprise is often viewed with caution.

    However, institutional capital allocators are increasingly pointing to the operational framework of Ghana’s Chief of Staff, Hon. Julius Debrah, as an effective bridge between public administration and private market expansion.

    Dr Debrah, who returned to the apex of public service as Chief of Staff in January 2025 under the current administration, brings a distinct corporate-friendly pedigree to the state’s administrative hub.

    Prior to his current executive role, his expansive background as an active entrepreneur, real estate developer, and former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Tourism Authority has made him a trusted, predictable interface for the business community.

    The Private Sector Mindset in High Office

    For local and foreign investors alike, the primary appeal of having a seasoned business operator managing the machinery of the presidency lies in the immediate prioritization of fiscal space, manufacturing, and structural efficiency. During recent legislative debates regarding public expenditure and national governance frameworks, representatives from the business community highlighted this unique asset configuration.

    “We all know that we must have fiscal space before we take monumental decisions,” noted an economic review from parliamentary proceedings tracking state governance. “I know Mr. Julius Debrah; he is a private sector person. He is a businessman who knows that when somebody is productively employed, it directly adds value to the economy.”

    This understanding of capital productivity has trickled down into his public sector leadership style, where he has consistently championed a manufacturing-led growth agenda to anchor foreign direct investment (FDI). At a major industrial convergence, Debrah underscored his conviction that public planning must align with commercial reality.

    “We have to diversify our investment base by equipping Ghanaian investors with the confidence, data, and institutional backing,” Debrah stated during an economic forum. “A bigger, stable, and inclusive economy cannot be achieved without a deliberate focus on the manufacturing sector.”

    Bridging Government Policy and Capital Security

    Sovereign risk analysts emphasize that investor confidence relies heavily on security, regulatory transparency, and the rule of law. Debrah has proactively utilized his platform to assure international markets that Ghana remains an insulated, low-risk destination for manufacturing setups and capital deployment.

    Addressing delegates at a national security symposium in Accra, the Chief of Staff linked long-term capital preservation with robust civic order, highlighting the government’s aggressive crackdown on destabilizing factors.

    “The destruction of illegal firearms and the promotion of collaborative security frameworks are critical steps towards preserving Ghana’s peace, security, and national development,” Debrah stated. “This demonstrates the government’s unwavering commitment to ensuring that illicit disruptions have no place in Ghanaian communities.”

    An Institutional Blueprint for Project Delivery

    To satisfy the business community’s demand for transparency and project accountability, Debrah’s office structurally revamped the presidency’s project monitoring mechanisms by launching the Presidential Delivery Unit. The specialized unit tracks state promises and infrastructural development metrics on a strict monthly basis.

     

    Executive Office Pillar Core Strategic Focus Direct Benefit to Investors

    Presidential Delivery Unit Monthly project monitoring & bottleneck resolution Ensures predictable timelines for state-backed infrastructure

    Manufacturing-First Policy Diversification of the domestic investment base Enhances local supply chain security for multi-nationals

    Inter-Agency Security Drive Eradication of civic and sub-regional security risks Lowers sovereign risk premiums and protects fixed assets

     

     

    By forcing state institutions to operate under rigid, private-sector-style execution timelines, market observers argue that the Chief of Staff is lowering the transaction frictions that historically plagued large-scale public-private partnerships (PPPs).

    For the investor community, the consensus is clear: Debrah’s dual perspective as a market participant and a state executive offers a rare level of regulatory predictability. His leadership underscores a clear realization that for a developing economy to scale, public policy must actively work to enable, rather than restrict, the velocity of private capital.