Categories: Readers Mail

With PLENTY Sugar Daddies & Mummies, Why Must Ghanaian University Students Work?

Sugar Daddy

Dear Chris-Vincent,

I have taken time to read your recent article titled ‘The Work Culture of Ghanaian Students | Why Don’t Most Ghanaian University Students Work?’ and I’ve gone through the interesting but disagreeing comments as well…

Even though you make some great points and delve well into the subject of the non-existing ‘Work Culture’ among Ghanaian students, you failed to look at an obvious but shameful truth about the lifestyle of Ghanaian students, affecting their decisions to work or not to work.

I completed University of Ghana about 4 years ago and worked part time at a family friend’s pharmacy, especially weekends and contrary to arguments of time table issues made by certain people who commented, I did well with punctuality and turned up to work all the time as agreed. There were certain days I couldn’t make it but that had nothing to do with my studies or time table, I just had some other businesses to attend to…

So I am a living testimony of the fact that students who really want to work in Ghana can do so and despite the fact that jobs are difficulty to come by, with a vigorous push, you can find a place to work.

Another thing you and the other readers need to take note is the issue of remuneration. The pay for most jobs in Ghana are not good and therefore students are not attracted to working, measuring the time to be spent with the money to be earned. But of course as you rightly mentioned, working culture is not solely about the money, it is about developing other ethics needed for the bigger world.

READ ALSO: The Work Culture of Ghanaian Students | Why Don’t Most Ghanaian University Students Work?

When I used to work as a student, majority of my female colleagues and a greater number of female students I knew did not find work attractive because their off campus lifestyle paid far better than any part time job will pay them.

I know for sure this is not a unique phenomenon at University of Ghana but also at the various Universities across the country. Young female students pride themselves with what we call ‘Sugar Daddies’ who cater for most of their needs and these ‘Sugar Daddies’ ranges from Politicians to Doctors and from Businessmen to Investors. These men mostly with wives at home have the weekends of greater number of the female students fully booked, well in advance.

So how will such students consider work or buy into a working culture? Sugar Daddies and Sugar Mummies pay more than any part time job out there and that is the real truth.

I am not saying that is what every University student did during my time or do at the present. All I am saying is, this is such a strong factor that most people are missing.

In the Canada, USA or Europe, the probability of finding men or women ready to leave their marriages at home and pay a lot of money to students in exchange for an affair is pretty low. Men and women in the west don’t pay out that much, not to students in exchange for sex. Therefore, working for Sugar Daddies and Sugar Mummies does not exist, except working part time for real jobs as student.

So to me, the Sugar Daddy and Sugar Mummy culture at our universities in Ghana is a contributing factor as to why Ghanaian students do not have working culture or any urge to find part time jobs.

Who wants to work when your Sugar Daddy or Sugar Mummy is readily available to sponsor?

From: Evelyn A. Ntiriwaa/ Canada

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You can send your Readers’ Mail directly to me via Vincent@ghanacelebrities.com

It may take some time to get published because I receive a lot of such mails and need to publish them one after the other. Thank You.

This post was published on June 5, 2014 8:27 PM

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