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Unable to get a job as an accountant since graduating five years ago, Ghanaian Nathaniel Qainoo has been forced to swap his calculator for a spanner.
The 29-year-old was busy repairing a taxi under the shade of a mango tree when the BBC met him at his home in the small town of Kasoa, about 30km (18 miles) from the capital Accra.
He often spoke of "the hardship" - a phrase that has become common in Ghana since the nation plunged into a deep economic crisis in 2022.
This was the year when the government defaulted on its debt repayments, international rating agencies downgraded Ghana's creditworthiness to "junk status", and inflation skyrocketed to 54%. To add to the woes of Ghanaians, their currency, the cedi, has lost 70% of its value in the past eight years.
This forced Ghana to secure a $3bn (£2.4bn) bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The economic recovery efforts have been costly, resulting in significant losses for pensioners and investors who held government bonds.
All this has made Mr Qainoo so despondent that he does not intend to vote in Saturday's presidential and parliamentary elections, though the electoral commission is confident that voter turnout will be high.
"I don't know how this country is going to be saved from this crisis," Mr Qainoo told the BBC.
His mind is on emigrating to North America or Europe.
"I would like to leave the country, go outside, live better, work harder," Mr Qainoo added.
He is not alone. Many young people - who make up almost 40% of the population, according to the 2021 census - want to quit Ghana.
They see few job prospects in a country with an unemployment rate of 14%.
So it is not surprising that the economy has dominated the election campaign.
The two main presidential front-runners are:
- Former President John Mahama, who is hoping to barrel his way back to power like Donald Trump, and
- Mahamudu Bawumia, who feels the time has come for him to step into the president's shoes after eight years as vice-president.
The two are vying to succeed President Nana Akufo-Addo. He is stepping down at the end of his two terms, with Ghanaians hoping for a smooth transfer of power to ensure that Ghana retains its reputation as stable democracy.
Contesting the election under the banner of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP), Bawumia's major handicap is incumbency.
Holding a masters in economics from the UK's prestigious Oxford University, he heads the government's economic management team, and the collapsing economy has tarnished his reputation as an "economic whizzkid".
He was mocked in 2023 as "our Maguire" - a reference to Manchester United footballer Harry Maguire, who had been performing badly on the pitch at the time.
"We may be tired of hearing it, but there is no avoiding the fact that the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war resulted in the greatest economic depression in the world since the 1990s with most countries recording negative GDP growth," he said.
No party in Ghana has ever won more than two consecutive terms since the country restored democracy in 1992, a tradition the NPP says it is determined to break by ensuring that it wins a parliamentary majority and Bawumia the presidency.
"Dr Bawumia’s government plans to invest in a digital economy hub and provide venture capital funding for tech start-ups," his campaign website says.
Ghanaian political analyst Clement Sefa Nyarko told the BBC that Bawumia's promise to create a "digital economy" was his biggest electoral drawcard.
"In fact, if you see his posters in town, he has this symbol of digitalisation, suggesting that he is the man to take Ghana forward," he added.
As for Mahama, his campaign has focused on a promise to "reset" the economy, with the essence of his message being, as Dr Nyarko put it: "Give me a chance. At least the economy didn’t crash under my watch despite the difficulties."
But his critics have doubts, pointing out that Ghana plunged into an electricity crisis when he was in office from 2014 to 2017 so they do not see how a man who could not keep the lights on can reset the economy.
The power cuts were so bad that Mahama joked at the time that he was known as "Mr Dumsor" - dum means off and sor means on in the local Twi language.
"All the major and most prosperous economies in the world operate various degrees of 24-hour economies.
"They will face a challenge in terms of navigating within the IMF-supported programme," he added.
"Politics is nothing but a contest of ideas and a referendum of your work. People are going to see which one will really work the magic and of course what are their records," he added.
But with the poll having a margin of error of 1.9%, some analysts say Mahama could fall short of crossing the 50% mark, forcing a run-off.