The National Development Planning Commission (NDPC) and the Design and Technology Institute (DTI) on Wednesday convened a high-level stakeholder meeting in Accra to advance Phase II of the Human Capital Development (HCD) Strategy for 2026 in a push to align workforce development with industrial transformation
“Today is about
alignment. We want everyone to leave this room understanding their role, the
expectations and the commitments needed to deliver the 2026 work plan.”
She noted that
persistent complaints about low productivity and inconsistent craftsmanship
were tied to gaps in human capital.
Mr. Suleman also
announced Ghana’s ambition to transition to dual TVET, a globally recognised
apprenticeship model where learners spend up to four days a week in industry
and one day in school.
“To make this work,
industry must be incentivised. We are working with government on tax incentives
and quality improvements so that training institutions and industry can meet
each other halfway.”
Dr. Audrey Smock Amoah, Director-General of NDPC, said Ghana’s workforce challenges required bold structural reforms.
“A strategy is a
living document that adapts to evolving needs. We conducted extensive reviews
and discovered that while many interventions exist, they are fragmented. Our
mandate is to convene all actors, harmonise efforts and develop a shared work
plan.”
He emphasised that the
strategy ties into Ghana’s long-term national development goals, with clearly
defined long-, medium- and short-term priorities.
A national skills
forecast presented by Dr. Magnus Duncan confirmed persistent gaps in precision,
digital literacy, technical problem‑solving and maintenance skills.
Youth representatives
underscored the importance of relevance and opportunities.
“We want training that
leads to real jobs, real competencies and real opportunities. PQ makes a
visible difference in our confidence and employability.”
Private‑sector
voices also called for predictability in training pipelines, standards, and co‑investment
models.
Stakeholders
highlighted the need for stronger coordination, predictable financing, clearer
pathways for artisans and MSMEs and incentives for industry participation as
well as improved data for decision-making.
Key outcomes included
of the meeting included shared understanding of the 2026 Phase II agenda,
clarified resource and financing gaps, identification of potential partners and
co‑investors, commitments to technical follow‑up sessions and
strengthened joint ownership under NDPC leadership with DTI support.
Closing the session,
NDPC leadership noted:
“Ghana’s industrial
transformation depends on its people. Our responsibility is to build a
workforce ready for the industries we are growing—not the ones we left behind.”
DTI leadership added:
“We can achieve more
if we move together with urgency and discipline. Phase II is about measurable
impact.”
Stakeholders agreed to
commence technical working sessions, resource mobilisation, and preparations
for the 6th Precision Quality Conference later this year.

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