Preference For Exotic Products Killing Local Industries
Date published: September 24, 2014
By Mohammed Awal
The
Continuous preference of exotic products by Ghanaians to locally
manufactured ones is seriously crippling the local manufacturing
industries, the Administrative Manager of KPOGAS Standard Furniture,
Christian Agyare, has said.
Corroborating these claims, Victor Cordell, a retired Professor of Fisher Graduate School, noted in his work titled: “The effects of consumer preferences for foreign sourced products,” said that in economically underdeveloped countries, preferences for domestic products always tends to be weaker, and Ghana is no exception.
As
a result, there have been incessant pleas on Ghanaians to patronize
goods and services made locally, so as to help local industries stay in
operation, thus contributing to national economic development.
These
calls have come as a result of the low interest Ghanaians have shown in
patronizing local goods and services and the related challenge it poses
to the country’s industrial development and ultimately economic
development.
One such industry that has suffered most from this unquenchable taste for foreign goods and services is the furniture industry.
To
understand the extent to which the Ghanaian furniture industry has been
suffocated as a result of these unabated preference of exotic furniture
to local ones, The Chronicle explores the views of some industry
players.
The Administrative Manager of
KPOGAS Standard Furniture, Christian Agyare, in an interview with The
Chronicle yesterday, blamed the industry’s current slump on the attitude
of the Ghanaian towards domestic products.
Asked
whether he knows why Ghanaians prefer foreign furniture to what is
being manufactured locally, he said: “Well there could be different
reasons.” He, however, argues that most of them had to do with the
finishing.
The finishing, he noted,
gives the product its aesthetic qualities and Ghanaians tend to
appreciate those aspects of a product, as against the locally
manufactured ones, even though those may not be durable.
Apart
from that, he observed that several years of colonialism is also a
factor. “Colonialism has made it such a way that Ghanaians feel that
once the thing is from outside it is better. That is really a mystery
that I do not know,” bemoaned Mr. Agyare.
“Even
if the thing is coming from Togo, the Ghanaian perception is that it is
better, which unfortunately is not true,” he pointed out.
Reality
He
said the general notion among some Ghanaians that the locally produced
goods are inferior to the imported ones in terms of performance and
quality, to the extent that local manufacturers have had to sometimes
resort to claiming foreign origins for their products, so as to attract
the public to purchase them, “is not just a notion but reality.”
Government’s directive
On
the government’s call that Ghanaians should cultivate the culture of
patronizing products manufactured domestically, Mr. Agyare said the
directive is a laudable one, only if it would be adhered to diligently.
“That
is a very good directive and I believe that it will boost the local
industries…we will be proud using our own locally manufactured products,
thus deepening our identity us Ghanaians”, he said.
According
to him, diligent adherence to the directive would bring about an
improvement in the country’s economic development, helping stabilize the
cedi against the dollar.
“This is good, instead of always importing – importing, importing. So it’s a good directive provided it would be adhered to.”
The
president, during the last sectional address gave a directive that all
Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) should patronize locally
manufactured furniture.
Also,
the Minister of Local Government, Julius Debrah said that strenuous
adherence to the President’s directive would help stabilize the local
currency which had witnessed momentous dip in value against the dollar
and other major trading currencies.
“When
you import any piece of furniture from outside, the first thing we
suffer is that we need to exchange our currency for foreign ones
[dollar] to be able to access it,” Mr. Debrah told myjoyonline.com
“We
are trying to appeal to the conscience of our people that if we can
patronize our own [furniture], we would then be in the process of
creating jobs for our citizenry and also saving hard earned foreign
exchange,” he added.
Short URL: http://thechronicle.com.gh/?p=80779
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