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Home»Top stories»What Today’s Youth Can Learn from the 1970s and 80s
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What Today’s Youth Can Learn from the 1970s and 80s

Ghana NewsBy Ghana NewsMay 31, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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Introduction
In this urgent yet deeply reflective piece, Retired Senior Citizen draws a direct line between the iron-clad communal discipline of the 1970s and 80s and the fast-paced, digital frontiers of modern Ghana. This article is not a passive journey into nostalgia; it is an active, fiery manifesto for today’s youth leaders, student unions, and rising entrepreneurs to reclaim the accountability of our past to save the future of our nation.

The Ghana I Walked In: What Today’s Youth Can Learn from the 1970s and 80s

Every nation rides on the back of its memories, but a nation that actively forgets its foundational values risks fracturing its own future. Today, Ghana stands at a thrilling but dangerous crossroads of rapid urbanization, technological adaptation, and fierce youthful ambition. Our vibrant nation of 34 million people is incredibly youthful, with 73% of the population under the age of 35. Yet, beneath the glitz of fiber-optic internet, fintech apps, and high-rise apartments, our vital social fabric is fraying at an alarming rate.

This is not a soft, nostalgic complaint about “the good old days”—it is an urgent cultural alarm. To build a resilient economy, the youth of today must courageously peer through the rearview mirror at the Ghana of the 1970s and 1980s. By aggressively injecting the discipline, community accountability, and patience of yesteryear into today’s digital tools, the new generation can prevent a moral collapse and steer our homeland toward true greatness.

The Memory: A Canvas of Discipline and Collective Care

To chart a better path forward, we must re-walk the vibrant, orderly corners of our past. Picture the strict, clockwork discipline of growing up inside Burma Camp, where punctuality was an unyielding law and respect for state institutions was absolute. That rigid order contrasted beautifully with the spirited, tight-knit communal warmth of the alleys in Labadi Aborme, where your neighbor’s home was safely your own. This was a time when education was not just about passing exams, but a holistic molding of human character. Whether you were under the rigorous moral guidance of Agogo State College or absorbing the historic excellence of Aggrey Memorial A.M.E. Zion in Cape Coast, integrity was taught as a core subject.

Back then, the neighborhood was an inescapable fortress of accountability. If you misbehaved on your trek home from school, an elder would discipline you on the spot without fear or hesitation. By the time you walked past famous local landmarks—like stopping by the legendary counter of Antie Agei (popularly known as Madam Guinness) in Madina for a cold drink—the news of your misbehavior had already traveled ahead of you. This was the legendary “it takes a village” philosophy in raw, beautiful motion. Children belonged to the community, and every adult acted as a sworn custodian of the nation’s morality.

Economic Realities: Then Versus Now

While the youth face unique modern hurdles, analyzing our shifting economic landscapes highlights a massive, worrying transformation in our national mindset regarding survival, wealth, and entrepreneurship. The raw contrast between these two eras teaches us profound lessons about character under fiscal pressure:

  • The Evolution of Hardship: The 1970s and 80s brought severe global oil shocks, triple-digit inflation, and the devastating 1983 famine which was fiercely compounded by the sudden repatriation of one million Ghanaians from Nigeria. Today, our hurdles are structural rather than scarcity-driven; macroeconomic growth parameters exist firmly on paper, yet youth unemployment and underemployment remain alarmingly high amid heavy public debt burdens.
  • National Stabilization Frameworks: Forty years ago, our leadership was forced to introduce the strict 1983 Economic Recovery Programme (ERP) to enforce absolute fiscal discipline and revive collapsing production sectors. Conversely, our modern reality has devolved into a cycle of structural dependence, marked by consecutive IMF bailout packages—spanning 18 separate arrangements since our independence—to correct recurring deficits.
  • Survival Strategies and Social Safety Nets: During the structural adjustments of yesteryear, the absolute lack of foreign luxury goods forced communities into a state of collective resilience where families substituted material lack with robust bartering, localized trading, and mutual aid. Today, our digital marketplace is vast, open, and hyper-commercialized; while it provides instant monetization opportunities, it operates within an atomized, highly individualized arena where every young person fights purely for themselves.
  • The Metamorphosis of the Wealth Mindset: In the earlier era, capital accumulation, mastering a trade, or climbing an institutional career ladder was understood as a lifelong marathon requiring multi-decade patience and generational integrity. In sharp contrast, today’s intense social media exposure and digital pressures have engineered a dangerous instant-gratification trap, pushing brilliant young minds to seek volatile, high-risk shortcuts over steady, value-driven enterprise building.

The Modern Angle: The Cost of Our Individualistic Speed

The communal village has been systematically dismantled and replaced by isolated, digital bubbles. While modern technology has brought undeniable convenience, we must confront the reality that it has introduced a predatory, highly individualistic culture that threatens our core identity:

  • From Order to Chaos: The disciplined queues and institutional respect of the old STC and omnibus era have given way to a toxic culture of cutting corners, visible from reckless traffic behavior to corporate bureaucracy.
  • The Isolation of the Screen: Virtual, superficial connections on social media platforms have largely replaced genuine, face-to-face neighborhood solidarity and mutual aid.
  • Erosion of Accountability: A defensive “mind your own business” mindset has paralyzed communal parenting, leaving the youth to navigate complex, commercialized moral landscapes completely devoid of a local safety net.

A Manifesto for Change: Direct Charge to Student Unions and Youth Groups

This is a direct, urgent charge to the National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS), campus SRCs, youth-led NGOs, and young corporate executives. You are the frontline vanguard of Ghana’s survival. You cannot afford to be passive spectators. You must spearhead three radical shifts immediately:

  • Institutionalize Absolute Campus Discipline: Student unions must move far beyond political factionalism and noisy partisan arguments. Lead by example. Enforce strict internal accountability, aggressively reject academic dishonesty, and organize campus-wide campaigns that champion physical order, environmental cleanliness, and uncompromising civic duty.
  • Revolutionize Value-Driven Entrepreneurship: Shift the campus mindset rapidly from “seeking a disposable job” to “creating sustainable, institutional value.” Use your youth networks to launch startups that solve real, deep-rooted Ghanaian structural problems—like agricultural logistics, local waste processing, and ethical fintech—built on transparent accounting rather than deceptive, short-term financial gains.
  • Digitize the Village for Mentorship: Use your advanced technological prowess to scale up communal accountability. Build robust digital mentorship platforms where successful alumni from schools like Aggrey Memorial and Agogo State can systematically coach, fund, and protect the next generation of student entrepreneurs.

The Ghana of the 1970s and 80s completely lacked the high-speed fiber optics, instant mobile money wallets, and global markets that our youth enjoy today. However, it possessed an invisible, priceless wealth: a massive national reserve of character, mutual respect, and systemic discipline.

The modern Ghanaian youth do not need to discard their smartphones, reject artificial intelligence, or ignore global trends. Instead, they must urgently upload the timeless, unyielding values of Burma Camp, Madina, and Labadi into the source code of the modern digital world. When collective discipline meets disruptive innovation, and when community accountability guides individual ambition, Ghana will do more than just survive—she will dominate. The road ahead requires the burning speed of our youth, but it desperately needs the unmoving directional compass of our history. Let us rise, adjust our sails, and build the nation we deserve.

✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua, Accra

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