Beyond the “Blouse” Banter: Why Fugu Day is not enough – Hasford Judge Quartey writes

The images from Lusaka, Zambia, in early February 2026 sparked debate across Ghanaian social media. A photograph of President John Dramani Mahama, dressed in a regal handwoven Fugu, drew dismissive commentary from some Zambian netizens who referred to the traditional garment as a “blouse.”
At home, the response was swift. In defense of Ghana’s cultural heritage, the Ministry of Tourism, Arts, and Culture announced a new directive: every Wednesday is now officially “Fugu Day.”
It is a welcome gesture. But if Fugu is dignified enough to be worn by the sitting President and significant enough to inspire national policy, why do we continue to treat indigenous attire as a once-a-week cultural observance rather than a professional standard?
For decades, Ghana’s workplace culture has revolved around “Friday Wear” — a well-intentioned initiative encouraging African prints at the end of the work week. Yet its structure subtly reinforced a hierarchy: Monday to Thursday were reserved for Western business suits, while Friday became the day for Ghanaian wear.
Over time, this created an unspoken ranking. The Western suit became synonymous with authority and seriousness, while indigenous attire became symbolic and occasional. When we position our own clothing as optional, it is hardly surprising that others misunderstand its stature.
Cultural confidence cannot thrive on tokenism. It must be normalized.
Beyond symbolism, what we wear has economic consequences.
In 2023 alone, Ghana imported nearly US$161 million worth of textile and clothing products, underscoring the country’s heavy reliance on foreign garments. Second-hand clothing — locally known as obroni wawu — is an even larger component of the market. Between 2021 and 2022, Ghana imported more than US$323 million worth of used clothing, with about US$164 million arriving in 2022 alone. While this trade supports an estimated 2.5 million livelihoods across the value chain, it also intensifies competition for local textile manufacturers, designers, tailors, and traditional weavers.
These figures reveal a structural reality. High clothing imports increase demand for foreign currency, placing pressure on the Cedi. Domestic textile factories struggle to scale production in the face of cheaper imports. Weaving communities in Daboya, Bolgatanga, and other areas experience inconsistent demand, limiting growth and long-term investment.
Clothing, therefore, is not merely aesthetic. It is an economic policy.
If Ghanaian wear became the default Monday-to-Thursday professional standard, it would create predictable and sustained demand for local production. That demand could stimulate textile manufacturing, strengthen rural weaving economies, and expand opportunities for tailors and designers nationwide.
This is not about banning suits or rejecting global influence. It is about recalibrating the default.
Rather than confining Ghanaian attire to a midweek celebration, it may be time to rethink the dress code paradigm.
Under the current model, Western business wear dominates the core of the work week, while Ghanaian attire is reserved for Friday. A more balanced alternative would reverse that structure: Ghanaian wear from Monday to Thursday as the official standard, with foreign attire optional at the end of the week.
Such a shift would send a clear message about identity and confidence. The first image Ghana presents in boardrooms, ministries and embassies each week would reflect its authentic cultural heritage.
Countries such as India and Japan demonstrate that national dress and global competitiveness are not mutually exclusive. Professionalism is defined by competence and conduct — not by imported fabric.
The recent episode in Zambia was more than social media banter. It was a reminder that visibility shapes perception. What is seen consistently becomes normalized. What is normalized becomes respected.
If the smock is regal — and it is — then it should not be confined to symbolic Wednesdays. It should be present in financial institutions, corporate headquarters, universities, and diplomatic missions throughout the week.
The Ministry’s directive is a spark. But sustainable cultural confidence requires structural integration.
Identity is not a costume.
Competence is not defined by imported fabric.
And cultural confidence should not be confined to a calendar.
Perhaps it is time we wore it as such.


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