NDC Will Win Election 2024 – EIU Projects

The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has projected a landslide victory for the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the 2024 General Election.

The EIU also added that the victory of the NDC will also come from a new candidate although it appears former President John Dramani Mahama who is a three-time flagbearer of the party is their sure bet for the 2024 polls.

According to the EIU, it expects a change in government after the New Patriotic Party has served eight years which is the norm since the break of dawn on democracy in Ghana. Where after a party has served eight years, a new party takes over.

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image result of John Mahama
John Mahama

Below Are Excerpt Of The Projection By The EIU

The next parliamentary and presidential elections are due in 2024. Under the constitutionally mandated term limits, Mr Akufo-Addo cannot run for a third term. Mr Mahama is reportedly considering whether to run again, but we expect the NDC to seek to revitalise its prospects with a fresh candidate. After two terms of NPP government, we expect the NDC to win the 2024 presidential election and to gain a small majority in parliament

“In the 2020 parliamentary election, the NPP and the NDC each won 137 seats, but in January the one independent Member of Parliament (MP) announced that he would co-operate with the NPP, giving it the 138 seats needed for an effective majority. With a razor-thin majority, the Akufo-Addo administration will require all of its MPs to vote with the party in order to push through signature policies, which is likely to necessitate deal-making to persuade MPs, which stands to obstruct immediate policy priorities, such as reducing a large fiscal overhang through expenditure cuts and tax rises.”

“Economic structure risk remains CCC-rated. The current-account deficit, which is estimated to have averaged 2.8% of GDP over the past 48 months, is a drag on the score. The country is currently estimated to be in default, following a rise in principal arrears owed to external official creditors in 2018. Arrears will remain substantial, raising the perceived risk of a prolonged default among investors. Regarding the structure of the national accounts, the services sector is the largest sector of the economy, accounting for about 45% of GDP.”

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Source: Kingaziz.com