• Advertise with Us
  • About Us
Saturday, May 9, 2026
  • Login
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • General News
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Africa
  • World
  • Health
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • General News
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Africa
  • World
  • Health
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Why the SIGA Guidance is a Triumph of Statecraft over Procedural Pedantry

EFO MAWUGBE by EFO MAWUGBE
April 14, 2026
in Opinion
0
Why the SIGA Guidance is a Triumph of Statecraft over Procedural Pedantry
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

By Raymond Ablorh

READ ALSO

Prof. Michael Kpessa-Whyte writes: Understanding SIGA’s Policy of Encouraging Inter-Trading Among Specified Entities

Uncomfortable but Honest Book Review: Rules of the Marketing Communications Executive: What Marketing Communications Execs Do, and How to Do It with Excellence

​The state is not a spectator in its own economy; it is the ultimate architect of its destiny. Thus, to suggest that the State Interests and Governance Authority (SIGA) errs by urging State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) to patronise SIC Insurance PLC is to mistake the rules of the game for the purpose of the match.

We are told by critics, most recently in the spirited but flawed critique by Kay Codjoe, that “process” is the holy grail of governance. But a process without purpose is merely a treadmill; it moves, but it goes nowhere.

​The advice in support of SIC is not an assault on procurement; it is an assertion of fiscal sovereignty.

​Critics argue that the SIGA advice creates an “uneven playing field.” This is a romanticised fallacy. There is no such thing as a “neutral” market when national survival is at stake. And, who says the playing field was even until the SIGA directive?

When a state entity sends its premiums to, for instance, a foreign-owned insurer, it is facilitating capital flight under the guise of “fairness.” By prioritising SIC, the state is ensuring that the public purse is not a sieve.

It is the highest form of stewardship to ensure that the “right hand” of the state supports the “left hand.” This is not a monopoly; it is a closed-loop economy designed to strengthen the national balance sheet.

​To demand that the state be indifferent to the success of SIC, an entity in which it holds a massive, anchor stake, is to demand that a father be indifferent to the hunger of his own child while he feeds the neighbour’s.

​The argument that “re-reinsurance does not replace process” is a clever bit of technical misdirection. The critics suggest that by bypassing competitive bidding, we ignore the complexities of risk distribution. How? The SIGA advice does not abolish the laws of physics or the mathematics of insurance; it simply settles the question of who the primary carrier shall be.

​SIC, a titan of the industry, possesses the institutional muscle and international partnerships to manage re-reinsurance with a sophistication few can match.

The “process” being defended by opponents is the process of fragmentation; the “process” being advanced by SIGA is the process of consolidation. One leads to a scattered, weakened public sector; the other builds a national champion capable of competing on the global stage.

​Public procurement, under Act 663, was never intended to be a suicide pact. It is a tool for national development. While competition is a value, strategic alignment is a virtue. Inter-trading among state entities is a globally recognised masterstroke for achieving administrative efficiency.

When GIHOC or any other SOE deals with SIC, they are not “dodging” the law; they are fulfilling a higher administrative mandate to reduce transaction costs and keep wealth within the ecosystem.

​The “unseen hands” mentioned by critics are not the hands of corruption; they are the visible hands of policy. Policy is not a shadow; it is a compass. If the government cannot urge its own agencies to cooperate, then the concept of a “unified state” is a mirage.

We must choose between a fragmented public sector that feasts upon itself in the name of “market rules” or a coordinated front that builds a formidable national legacy.

​The outcry against the SIC prioritisation is the noise of those who prefer a weak, apologetic state to a functional, assertive one. SIGA was not created to be a silent observer of institutional decay; it was created to govern.

This advice is an act of constitutional clarity. It asserts that the interests of the Republic of Ghana take precedence over the profit margins of private competitors.

​The path to prosperity is paved with synergy, not sabotage. If we are to build a resilient nation, we must stop apologizing for being strategic.

The SIGA advice is not a breach of the law; it is the ultimate fulfillment of it. We are not just buying insurance; we are ensuring our future.

Tags: Raymond AblorhSIGA

Related Posts

Prof. Michael Kpessa-Whyte writes: Understanding SIGA’s Policy of Encouraging Inter-Trading Among Specified Entities
Opinion

Prof. Michael Kpessa-Whyte writes: Understanding SIGA’s Policy of Encouraging Inter-Trading Among Specified Entities

April 9, 2026
Uncomfortable but Honest Book Review: Rules of the Marketing Communications Executive: What Marketing Communications Execs Do, and How to Do It with Excellence
Opinion

Uncomfortable but Honest Book Review: Rules of the Marketing Communications Executive: What Marketing Communications Execs Do, and How to Do It with Excellence

April 8, 2026
HARNESSING EPA AND RENT CONTROL FOR JOB CREATION: IF ONLY THERE IS A POLITICAL WILL
Opinion

HARNESSING EPA AND RENT CONTROL FOR JOB CREATION: IF ONLY THERE IS A POLITICAL WILL

April 7, 2026
From Tomatoes to Galamsey: How Ghana’s Broken Agricultural Policy Drove Farmers into the Pits
Opinion

From Tomatoes to Galamsey: How Ghana’s Broken Agricultural Policy Drove Farmers into the Pits

March 26, 2026
Ghana’s Next Big Reform Should Be Migration-Simeone Azoska
Opinion

Ghana’s Next Big Reform Should Be Migration-Simeone Azoska

March 24, 2026
Come home, Ken ! This is where you belong ! Kojo Yankah to Ken Ofori-Atta
Opinion

Come home, Ken ! This is where you belong ! Kojo Yankah to Ken Ofori-Atta

March 16, 2026
Next Post
New Pricing Window: GOIL, Star Oil, Lead Fuel Price Cuts

New Pricing Window: GOIL, Star Oil, Lead Fuel Price Cuts

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EDITOR'S PICK

  • All
  • Politics
Attacks on UTV: NMC Urges Police to Prosecute the Thugs

Attacks on UTV: NMC Urges Police to Prosecute the Thugs

October 8, 2023
Court Rejects Attempt to halt Daddy Lumba’s Burial Amid Widowhood Dispute

Court Rejects Attempt to halt Daddy Lumba’s Burial Amid Widowhood Dispute

October 28, 2025
Gov’t to Roll-Out Free Primary Health Care Policy on April 6; All You Need is Any form of Identification-Akandoh

Gov’t to Roll-Out Free Primary Health Care Policy on April 6; All You Need is Any form of Identification-Akandoh

February 9, 2026
Mahama and Macron strengthen Ghana-France ties at Paris Peace Forum

Mahama and Macron strengthen Ghana-France ties at Paris Peace Forum

October 30, 2025

About SenaRadio Online

SenaRadio Online is a Private News Portal based in capital of Ghana, Accra established in the year 2019.

SenaRadioonline.com is Ghana's leading news website that delivers high quality innovative, alternative news that challenges the status quo.

Follow us

Categories

  • Africa
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • General News
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent Posts

  • “Resetting Ghana”: Dr. Julius Debrah’s Call for Accountable Leadership and Measurable Results
  • From Vision to Value: How GoldBod’s Leadership is Reshaping Ghana’s Gold Sector
  • Resign if you are tired – Parliament’s health commitee tells medical professionals after Charles Amissah death probe
  • Vice President Opens 2nd African Health Workforce Investment Forum …Calls for Retention of Health Professionals in Africa

Gallery

© 2023 Sena Radio Online -All Rights Reserved Site Powered by CodeArthur

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • General News
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Africa
  • World
  • Health

© 2023 Sena Radio Online -All Rights Reserved Site Powered by CodeArthur

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In