I am the sole candidate among Mahama and Bawumia capable of restoring the cedi. – Alan

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I am the sole candidate among Mahama and Bawumia capable of restoring the cedi. – Alan

The Founder and Leader of the Movement for Change,Alan Kyeremanten , has asserted his ability to address the exchange rate crisis. He believe

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The Founder and Leader of the Movement for Change,Alan Kyeremanten , has asserted his ability to address the exchange rate crisis.

He believes he is the best candidate to restore the value of the Ghanaian cedi compared to John Dramani Mahama of the National Democratic Congress and Dr Mahamudu Bawumia of the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

 “The strength of the cedi is dependent on the demand and supply of foreign exchange. There is no other way unless you produce and export. Because if you don’t produce and use that to export abroad, you won’t get dollars into the system… but have you ever heard a head of state talk about this before? So it is a systemic failure for a long time,” he explained.

“So between Alan, ex-President Mahama, and Dr Bawumia, if it’s production and exports that would revive the cedi, who among the three of us can do that? If we have made that mistake all these years and now need someone who can do this, then it is Alan who can do that,” he stated confidently.

Mr Kyerematen also urged Ghanaians to shift their focus from unfulfilled manifesto promises to a national development plan.

He stated that a government under theMovement for change would prioritise significant constitutional reform.

“When you listen to the majority, they say when the NDC and NPP are in government, it is a winner-takes-all situation. If one party assumes office for eight years and you are not part of the party, then you are not part of the government. So the intelligence of many Ghanaians is disregarded in the governance of the country because it is winner-takes-all.

“If these two parties are in government, they work on projects, either good or bad, even if the other had already started the same… If there is no continuity, how do we move forward… Ghanaians are tired; they want a plan, not promises.”

“So we want to move Ghana beyond the manifesto promises. We want a national plan where Ghanaians are aware of where the country is headed. For the next 30 to 50 years, every party that assumes office would continue with whatever they meet,” he stated.

Mr Kyerematen proposed these measures to restore the cedi’s value during his Eastern Regional tour on Monday, 3rd June.