Tag: African Continental Free Trade Agreement

  • By 2050, Africa could feed 9 billion people worldwide  Bawumia

    By 2050, Africa could feed 9 billion people worldwide Bawumia

    Business owners gathered for the ongoing Africa Prosperity Dialogue have been reminded by Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia that this is the time for businesses to discuss clever ways to take advantage of the opportunities from the agreement for a resilient, sustainable, inclusive, and prosperous Africa.

    He claims that the purpose of this gathering is to accelerate the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement through a solution-driven approach.

    He claimed that, regrettably, the story of this stunning continent has been one of poverty, conflict, bad government, corruption, and underdevelopment in the majority of the globe.

    “The time has come for Africa and Africans to define our own narrative. We cannot allow poverty and underdevelopment to be the destiny of Africa, a continent so blessed with every natural resource imaginable – oil, gas, minerals, and sunshine.”

    “We have approximately 65% of all available arable land available to feed 9 billion people globally by 2050 and we are home to the most youthful population in the world.”

    “We have everything we need to transform Africa into a global powerhouse of the future,” he said.

    He explained Africa only accounts for about three per cent of global trade and intra-African trade is one of the lowest of any region globally.

    This, he said is largely due to the “colonial” economic model characterised by small individual economies, fragmented and disconnected regional markets, over-reliance and low productive capacities that we have practised for 60 years.

    “As growing economies, we often struggle to attract much-needed investments.

    “However, with the collaborated strength from all 55 Member States, we have a population of 1.2 billion, the majority of whom are young, and a GDP of US$ 2.5 trillion, making Africa the eighth (8th) largest economy in the world,” he said.

    He noted that this positions Africa as an attractive investment destination. “With the right investment, we will be able to sustain economic growth and create the job opportunities that the continent desperately needs,” he added.

    The Vice President admitted that AfCFTA is a real game-changer, and once fully realised: “We can increase intra-African trade by some US$ 35 billion and reduce external imports by some US$ 10 billion annually.

    “This will mean more opportunities for growth for our small businesses and the potential to lift more than three million people out of poverty.”

    He made this call at the Kwahu Summit ongoing at the Safari Valley in the Eastern Region.

    He explained that like the vision of our forebears, the African Continental Free Trade Area has set the stage for Africa’s industrialisation drive, but, it will take concrete, strategic actions by governments and businesses on the continent, the right mix of policies, a greater sense of purpose for more robust intra-African trade to happen to support economic diversification and the much-needed industrialisation of the continent.

    To bring about the transformation needed, he proposed three broad areas that need to be prioritised.

    First is the need for smart investments in critical infrastructure. “As a continent, we need to produce and trade our way out of poverty and underdevelopment, and we cannot do that without investing in smart infrastructure across the continent.

    “While the last decades have seen some positive investments, there is the need for additional resources to finance the ‘arteries for trade’, which include the physical infrastructure such as roads, rail, and energy; digital infrastructure such as data centres to facilitate the digital transformation and financial infrastructure to allow for integrated financial markets.

    “These investments will be critical to delivering the success of the AfCFTA.”

    The second is to unleash productive capacities across the continent.

    With that Dr Bawumia explained that “We must create platforms for knowledge brokerage and access to information on critical products and services on the continent to allow 445 million small businesses across the continent to plug into the value chains of these mega industries.”

    For his part, the founder and Chairman of Africa Prosperity Network, the organisers of the Africa Prosperity Dialogues, Mr Gabby Otchere-Darko thanked all the participants for choosing to be part of this historic gathering.

    According to him, this is historic because Africa is creating the right environment for the private sector to join forces to assert a leading voice and play the leadership role in how best and how fast the continent can build and drive a vibrant, single market in Africa and for the shared prosperity of Africa’s nearly 1.4 billion citizens.

    He revealed that next month, Africa’s political leaders will once again meet in Addis Ababa, to talk about the continent’s common destiny.

    “Our voices here in Adukrom should resonate in Ethiopia. This year, incidentally, marks the 60th anniversary of the Organisation of African Unity, which was set up to promote the unity and solidarity of the African States.”

  • Stakeholders meet to discuss practical ways to improve trade finance for SMEs

    Stakeholders from the financial sector have gathered in Accra for a Public Private Dialogue to examine doable solutions to increase the country’s Small and Medium Enterprises’ (SMEs) access to trade credit.

    The African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) is now operational, so the Public-Private Dialogue (PPD), which was organized by CUTS International Accra, a renowned research and public policy think tank, with assistance from GIZ Ghana, aimed to involve relevant stakeholders on how to practically improve businesses’ and SMEs’ access to trade finance.

    In his welcoming remarks, the West African Regional Director of CUTS International, Mr Appiah Kusi Adomako explained that with the commencement of Trading under AfCFTA in January 2021, government and banks in the country must retool their trade finance packages to support SMEs in Ghana to make them competitive and improve their businesses and service.

    “Businesses and SMEs, require finance to be able to increase their business and improve their services to fulfill the demands of the growing market and AfCFTA. However, most of these SMEs in Ghana, similar to other African countries, face obstacles when trying to get trade financing, hence the call on government and financial institutions to support SMEs,” Mr Adomako explained.

    He added that access to trade finance is listed as one of the biggest problems that SMEs in Ghana must deal with.

    Mr Adomako explained that “the AfCFTA presents a rare opportunity for businesses across the continent to be able to export goods, largely quota-free and duty-free. On the parallel side also, member countries can equally import from one country to the other without any quantitative restriction. Even if an SME is not willing to export under the AfCFTA agreement, it must ensure that it is competitive at the local market as it can face competition from other African imports.”

    Mr Adomako emphasized that “the establishment of the Development Bank Ghana (DBG) by Government of Ghana, aimed at providing long-term and competitively priced loans to SMEs who have long struggled with the problem of access to finance to ensure that SMEs are better financed in critical sectors of the economy.

    While I commend the government for this great initiative, there is the need to create a good and friendly business environment and tailor-make policies and initiatives for the private sector, to guarantee SMEs have access to trade financing to support the growth and expansion of their business to other countries.”

    In addition, Mr Adomako explained there is the need to also create a good and friendly business environment and tailored-made policies and initiatives for the private sector, to guarantee SMEs have access to trade financing to support the growth and expansion of their business to other countries”.

    An Economist with the Bank of Ghana, Mr Kwasi Acheampong also emphasized that the Bank of Ghana is putting in measures to cushion businesses and support SME development. He said although the country is going through some economic difficulties, the Bank of Ghana is committed and is rolling out strategies and measures to address the current economic state of play.

    On his path, the Technical Advisor at the GIZ Trade Hub, Mr James Amisssah Hammond underscored the critical role SMEs play in the success of the AfCFTA and their contribution to Ghana’s GDP and trade.

    He explained that GIZ has conducted several training programs on the AfCFTA, and rules of Origin to build the capacity of the SMEs and improve their knowledge and awareness of the Agreement. He emphasized GIZ’s commitment to supporting SME development to unlock their potential to position them to benefit the AfCFTA.

    In attendance were representatives from the Bank of Ghana, US Embassy, European Union, Zenith Bank, Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Absa Bank, Association of Bankers, Chartered Institute of Bankers,

    KPMG, Ghana Revenue Authority, Ghana Enterprise Agency, Ministry of Trade and Industry, Cal Bank, ARB Apex Bank, Prudential Bank, Economics Department of the University of Ghana, Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC), GT Bank, GBC Bank Plc, FBN Bank among others, Private Enterprise Federation, the media and SMEs in Accra.

  • Micro-credit sector ready to drive MSMEs growth amid economic challenges

    Micro, small, and medium-sized companies (MSMEs) have made a commitment to supporting their growth as they attempt to lead the nation’s post-COVID-19 economic recovery efforts.

    MSMEs are the backbone, basis, and real engine of growth for the economy, accounting for over 90% of all enterprises in the nation and collectively producing roughly 70% of GDP.

    Given the above, stakeholders and players in the micro-credit sector have resolved to open their doors for MSMEs to access financial support in the form of loans to aid in their upscaling and growth – in order to take full advantage of the prospects and opportunities offered by the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA), which will play a key role in economic recovery efforts.

    The micro-credit sector’s gross loans and advances amounted to GH¢312million as at December 2021. This amount represented a growth of 15.13 percent compared to the 8.3 percent recorded in 2020. The higher growth in gross and net loans and advances reflects the higher credit demand by micro, small and medium enterprises.

    “We appreciate the fact that globally, and in our country, we are all facing serious economic challenges which have also impacted the micro-credit sector. It is not in doubt that small loans play a critical role in supporting MSMEs. We therefore call for greater support and engagement to drive the sector,” Chairman of the Micro-Credit Association Ghana (MCAG), Wilberforce Ofori, stated during the Association’s 13th Annual General Meeting.

    Acknowledging the negative impact of recent downgrades by rating agencies like Fitch and Moody’s on the ability of MSMEs to attract foreign investments, Mr. Ofori said the micro-credit sector is poised to lead the acceleration of inclusive and sustainable economic transformation with the MSMEs through accessible and cheaper loans.

    “Access to credit enables businesses to expand, create jobs and reduce inequality. Financial inclusion is the bridge between economic opportunity and social outcome,” he stated in his speech at the AGM, themed ‘Building Partnerships and Synergies to Strengthen the Micro-Credit Sector’.

    Meanwhile, the micro-credit sector posted massive gains in 2021 – with total assets increasing by 146.79 percent year-on-year to GH¢410million as at end of December 2021 compared to 36.3 percent growth in 2020.

    The increase in asset growth was attributed to the gradual rebound in economic activities after COVID-19, and the increase in number of members reporting.

    Again, shareholders’ funds continue to drive the funding of total assets with robust growth of 74.33 percent to GH¢304.8million as at December 2021, relative to the 74.14 percent growth recorded in 2020; with total borrowings reduced by 16 percent in December 2021 compared to 24 percent growth in the previous year, according to the report by MCAG.

    Giving highlights of the sector’s performance as captured by the report during the AGM, Mr. Ofori said the Association’s accumulated funds stand at GH¢1.9million with actual revenues being GH¢1.2million, compared to a total budget revenue of GH¢1.4million at the end of 2021. The key revenue items were subscriptions, licence & licence processing fees, membership registration fees and training fees.

    He said total expenditure amounted to GH¢780,340 as compared to a budgeted expenditure of GH¢1.24million, with the key expenditure items being on-site inspection and supervision expenses, personnel emoluments, governing council expenses, and general administrative expenses.

    Attributing the sector’s performance in the year under review to good corporate governance, Mr. Ofori said the Association’s corporate governance structure has seen a healthy improvement with its balance of skill and experience – which has been extremely beneficial to the sector, particularly at a time when the country is reeling from acute economic challenges.

    “This is buttressed by a comprehensive framework based on integrity, transparency and consensus building,” he stated, adding: “It is a reflection of the Association’s diverse competencies and expertise.”

  • Let’s leverage digital technologies to achieve economic freedom – ILAPI

    A high-level debate series on how the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AFTCTA) and digital assets could propel the nation toward economic freedom has been organized by two nonprofit organizations.

    They are Wada and Global Policy House in collaboration with the Institute for Liberty and Policy Innovation (ILAPI),

    Speaking during the discussion series, Mr. Peter Bismark Kwofie, the Executive Director of ILAPI, explained that the relationship with Wada, a blockchain organization, is intended to examine how technology may redefine fiscal and monetary policies in order to promote economic growth and prosperity.

    He said, “block chain and other emerging technologies should drive innovations that could help reduce inflation and unemployment for investment and trade.”

    Mr. Kwofie said the partnership will also build a strong vibe for Ghana to see technology as a catalyst for growth.

    He called on stakeholders in the country to ensure that the youth and policymakers are educated on the need to leverage technology for development.

    Mrs. Afia Owusu, the lead for Wada, said Wada is mainly into developing skills in the block chain ecosystem as well as artificial intelligence gathering.

    She said Wada gives voice to the voiceless by ensuring that people leverage emerging technologies such as Web 3 and block chain, which many advanced countries had use to develop their economies.

    She revealed that many African countries especially Ghana believe that block chain technologies are scams but they are solely for investment and business innovation purposes.

    Mrs Owusu said advanced countries are using block chain technologies to cut middlemen on whatever programme they are running.

    She said, “Wada is currently doing regenerative agriculture in Tamale with a group of farmers growing Bambara beans and are linked all over the world to consumers of Bambara beans who support the farmers with finance,” she said.

    Mrs. Owusu said there is an ongoing exercise in Ghana and Mozambique where one can register a land and link up with potential buyers worldwide.

    She said going forward, Wada will engage the youth on how to leverage the recent technology in the area of education, improve economies and better lives.

    The Member of Parliament for Madina Constituency and a panel member, Francis-Xavier Sosu highlighted the economic benefit of AfCFTA on African countries if only governments show political commitment to it implementation.

    He said despite the greatness associated with AfCFTA, when it comes to implementation African leaders are found wanting adding that, at the international level “we agree to these beautiful agreements but in reality, traders are being victimised in other countries in the area of free trade.”

    “Is either we are for AfCFTA and willingly domesticate our laws and open up our space and borders for free movement of goods and services and also educate indigenous traders to also take advantage or if we don’t want it and we back off,” he said.

    Mr Sosu said Ghana is the host to AfCFTA secretariat, yet there is not enough commitment to the ideas of it in terms of dealing with foreigners who trade in the country and “I think that is not the appropriate way to go.”

    “I, therefore, call on civil society groups in the country to hold the government accountable to the benefit of AfCFTA or we risk losing it,” he stressed.

  • MSMEs listing on GAX critical to funding growth ambitions – GSE

    Micro, Small, and Medium-Sized Enterprises (MSMEs) that are drawn to the prospects and opportunities provided by the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) have been urged to list on the Ghana Alternative Market (GAX), as it gives them a channel to finance their growth aspirations in Africa.

    The primary goal of the GAX, which was established in acknowledgment of MSMEs’ significance to the national economy, is to give MSMEs a platform on which to solicit long-term growth capital from investors.

    And in light of the current economic challenges, especially with high interest rates, equity becomes a more suitable way to fund the recovery, resilience and growth of MSMEs’ in the country, the GSE’s Head of Marketing and Public Relations, Jerry Boachie-Danquah, told the Business and Financial Times in email on behalf of the Managing Director of the Exchange, Abena Amoah.

    According to him, listing on the Exchange makes it easier for MSMEs to pass due diligence when doing business in other markets, “offering a badge of credibility to all potential partners, suppliers or customers of the MSME or SME”.

    Currently, there are only six companies listed on the GSE’s established MSME market, GAX – a figure many players in the sector describe as woefully inadequate at a time the country is ramping up efforts to be a major player in the continental free trade area.

    To reverse the trend and encourage MSMEs to take advantage of opportunities provided by the exchange, The GSE has therefore been holding continuous market development and awareness seminars for MSMEs.

    “Under various partnership agreements, we also provide training and market-readiness assessments for identified SMEs. The GSE has signed strategic MoUs with the Association of Ghana Industries, Development Bank of Ghana and the Stanford Seed Transformation Network (STN) Ghana. These partnerships allow the GSE to reach SMEs that are members of these groups. The Exchange is open to building more of such partnerships in order to broaden our reach to SMEs in Ghana,” Boachie-Danquah said.

    MSMEs solution to economic challenge

    Earlier this month, Managing Director of the Exchange Abena Amoah said the MSME sector is the solution to sustainability of the economy.

    With over 90 percent of businesses in the country being SMEs and contributing collectively at least 70 percent of the GDP, Ms. Amoah called for the institution of deliberate measures to support growth of the sector.

    “SMEs are the backbone, the foundation and true engine of growth for the Ghanaian economy…and Ghana will not grow without SMEs growing strongly,” the deputy managing director of the GSE said when speaking at a capacity building workshop for SMEs organised by the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) in partnership with the Exchange and Development Bank of Ghana (DBG), under the theme ‘Empowering SMEs with key strategies for resilience and business sustainability’.

    “It is against this background that the GSE and DBG want to move beyond the rhetoric and work with your association, AGI, to prepare local businesses through capacity-building programmes to raise the much-needed patient and affordable capital to catapult and accelerate their growth and that of the economy,” she added.

    Tripartite agreement to push MSME sector

    Already, the DBG has signed a tripartite memorandum of understanding with the Association of Ghana Industries and Ghana Stock Exchange as part of its mandate to build capacity and empower banks and entrepreneurs through financial innovation and other advisory services to strengthen the ecosystem in which businesses operate.

    The collaboration seeks to fashion innovative solutions which demonstrate that principles and profits are not mutually exclusive.

  • The UK filed new projects with the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre with the biggest value, totaling US$278.90 million, accounting for 35.5% of the US$785.62 million in FDI commitments made during the first half of 2020.

    According to officials in the UK embassy’s commercial department in Accra, British trade and investment inquiries are at an all-time high.

    Ghana purchased goods worth US$5.75 billion in 2018 and exported goods worth US$931.67 million to the UK, a 14 percent rise over the previous year.

    As the United Kingdom gets closer and closer to a widely feared no-deal exit from the European Union, its private sector is already making moves to cement alternative trade and investment counterparties.

    One of them is Ghana, a traditional major trade and investment partner which has lost ground to various counterparties in both western and eastern Europe over the past couple of decades because of the more favorable terms and conditions offered it by being part of a continental free market.

    Instructively, during the first half of 2020, which saw a late rebound in foreign direct investment inflow commitments, the UK recorded the highest value of US$278.90 million for new projects registered with the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre, which translates to 35.5 percent of the US$785.62 million in FDI commitments made during the first six months of the year.

    But the British government is pulling out all the stops to vastly increase business volumes between the two countries from next year as part of wider efforts to fill the inevitable huge void that will be created by BREXIT, especially if the UK and the European Union cannot agree on terms for an orderly exit as now seems increasingly likely.

    Instructively the governments of both countries are currently engaged in negotiations which, if successful, would allow the two countries to continue the preferential trade terms applicable through the ECOWAS – EU Economic Partnership Agreement.

    Commercial department sources at the UK’s embassy in Accra claim that trade and investment inquiries from Britain are reaching a long-term peak.

    They explain that increasing interest is not being propelled by BREXIT alone; British businesses are also enthused by the prospect of being able to trade with the rest of Africa duty-free under the terms of the impending African Continental Free Trade Agreement as long as they set up manufacturing plants in Ghana so as to fulfill rules of origin requirements.

    British enterprises favor Ghana as a manufacturing hub on the continent because of cultural similarities, political stability, economic liberalization, adherence to the rule of law, and good economic performance which is allowing for currency exchange rate stability.

    In 2018, Ghana exported US$931.67 million worth of products to the UK a 14 percent increase over the previous year – and imported US$5.75 billion worth of products.

    With regards to investments, the UK is one of Ghana’s traditional biggest sources of FDI.

    Some of the biggest foreign corporations in Ghana – such as Tullow Oil, Unilever, Prudential Insurance, Vodafone, British Airways, and GlaxoSmith Kline among many others are British, UK’s Department of Trade now actively promoting Ghana as a preferred investment destination identifying in particular, the oil and gas, financial services, mining, infrastructure, agricultural technology, and healthcare sectors.

    Importantly the London Stock Exchange announced a partnership with the Ghana Stock Exchange at the beginning of 2020. Instructively Ghana’s Agyapa Gold Royalties, the state special purpose vehicle for monetization of its share of expected gold royalties is to do an Initial Public Offer on the LSE, expectedly before the end of this year.

    Trade analysts in London assert that BREXIT and the AfCFTA combined could double trade and investment volumes between the two counties in less than a decade.

  • Take advantage of AfCFTA – Mahama urges African countries

    All African nations are being urged by former president John Dramani Mahama to use the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to boost their economies.

    Mr. Mahama made these remarks at a virtual discussion on the evolving Africa-China agenda on Thursday, October 13, which was hosted by the Gusau Institute in Abuja.

    According to him, Senegal has created a unique economic zone to draw Chinese and other manufacturing firms.

    He noted that South Africa, Rwanda, and Mauritius are all making consistent advancements in manufacturing and value addition.

    “We must advantage of AfCFTA, grow our values and get ready for increase international trade,” Mr Mahama stressed.

    The AfCFTA is a free trade area founded in 2018, with trade commencing as of 1 January 2021. It was created by the African Continental Free Trade Agreement among 54 of the 55 African Union nations.

    The free-trade area is the largest in the world in terms of the number of participating countries since the formation of the World Trade Organization. Accra, Ghana serves as the Secretariat of AfCFTA and was commissioned and handed over to the AU by the President of Ghana Nana Akufo-Addo on August 17, 2020 in Accra.

    The agreement was brokered by the African Union (AU) and was signed by 44 of its 55 member states in Kigali, Rwanda on March 21, 2018. The agreement initially requires members to remove tariffs from 90% of goods, allowing free access to commodities, goods, and services across the continent.

    The United Nations Economic Commission for Africa estimates that the agreement will boost intra-African trade by 52 percent by 2022. The proposal was set to come into force 30 days after ratification by 22 of the signatory states.

    On April 2, 2019, The Gambia became the 22nd state to ratify the agreement, and on April 29 the Saharawi Republic made the 22nd deposit of instruments of ratification; the agreement came into force on May 30 and entered its operational phase following a summit on July 7, 2019.

    The general objectives of the agreement are to create a single market, deepening the economic integration of the continent; establish a liberalised market through multiple rounds of negotiations; aid the movement of capital and people, facilitating investment; move towards the establishment of a future continental customs union; achieve sustainable and inclusive socioeconomic development, gender equality and structural transformations within member states; enhance competitiveness of member states within Africa and in the global market; encourage industrial development through diversification and regional value chain development, agricultural development and food security; resolve challenges of multiple and overlapping memberships.

  • GEPA tasks MMDAs to identify key export products for development

    The Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) have been urged by the Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA) to actively participate in the nation’s export development activities.

    The GEPA said they could achieve this by ensuring and supporting an enabling environment and the development of at least one important export good from each district of the nation in which they have a competitive advantage.

    To meet the needs of manufacturers and industries, such recognized and targeted goods must be abundant, of the highest quality, and capable of being provided in big volumes and quantities.

    Dr. Martin Akogti, the Regional Head of the Upper East, and Upper West Regions of GEPA, made the appeal in Jirapa during a district-level sensitisation workshop on the National Export Development Strategy (NEDS) and the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA).

    The 63 participants, made up of shea butter, soybean, and groundnuts producers and processors, drawn from the Lambussie District and the Jirapa, Nandom, and Lawra Municipalities were taken through the Policy outlook for NEDS, the National Policy and Legal Regime for nontraditional exports, among others.

    He said the sensitisation workshop was aimed to expand the supply base and ensure the promotion of vigorous value addition to products and regulate the business environment, as well as build the capacity of processors and producers involved in nontraditional export transactions.

    The ultimate objective of the NEDS was to support the government’s initiative of revitalising the economy through the transformation from a raw material-based economy into an industrialised export-led one.

    Dr. Akogti said it was expected that NEDS when implemented, would cause substantial increases in nontraditional export revenues within 10 years to a projected 25.3 billion US dollars by the end of 2029.

    Mr Yakubu Yussif, Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist at the National AfCFTA Coordination Office, said the AfCFTA had the ambition of creating a single market to enhance African businesses among its 1.3 billion people.

    He said Africa had a population of 1.3 billion people and that it was estimated that US$3.4 billion could be raked into the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Ghana exporters must take advantage of this market.

    “In this regard, we need to identify new products and these products must be certified for Africa Market. We also need to expand companies audited to do business across the continent,” he indicated.

    Mr Yussif said about 200 agricultural-related companies had been audited and the AfCFTA was working assiduously to clear some of the barriers affecting exports and the free movement of goods and services across the continent.

    He stated that the rules and regulations of AfCFTA were also being integrated into the national laws so that companies that were ready to export could do business without any hindrance.

    Mr Yussif announced that currently, meaningful commercial trade was ongoing between Ghana and seven other African Countries and expressed the hope that more countries would come on board soon.

    Madam Comfort Kambataa, a beneficiary, who was into soybean processing, said the workshop had provided her with skills and knowledge that would be applied in the management of her business, especially in the areas of quality raw material acquisition, and linking to new technologies and markets.

    The GEPA, in collaboration with key export sector stakeholders such as the Ministries of Trade and Industry, Food and Agriculture and Local Government, Decentralisation and Rural Development, the National Coordination Office of AfCFTA, the National Development Planning Commission, the Food and Drugs Authority and others organised the district-level sensitisation workshop on the NEDS and the AfCFTA.

  • Ghana gives higher returns on investments – Oppong Nkrumah

    At the recently concluded Ghana-Canada Investment Summit (GCIS), the Minister of Information, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, urged investors to take into account the vast prospects in the country and focus their investments here for higher returns.

    Addressing the diaspora investor community at the 6-day summit organised by the Ghana Investment Promotion (GIPC) in Toronto, Canada on Thursday September 15, 2022, the Minister said the stable political atmosphere, coupled with the vast investment opportunities in the country, makes Ghana an investment destination of choice than its counterparts on the continent.

    “As the host of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA), Ghana has been placed in pole position to lead Africa’s economic and financial renaissance. This means that when you come back and do business in Ghana, and with Ghana, you are only opening your own door to access the entire African continent. I want to encourage you to come and invest in Ghana. We look forward to seeing you soon,” he said.

    Mr Oppong Nkrumah, who is also Member of Parliament for Ofoase/Ayirebi, described the country as a fertile ground for investment where businesses thrive due to its stable economic atmosphere urging prospective investors, especially from Canada, to consider Ghana as the gateway to a wider African market.

    He said Ghana has a wide range of investment vehicles available for every investor class which offer higher returns than other African countries. Citing the high returns in investment in equity markets and the high yields on Government of Ghana bonds, the Minister assured the diaspora investor community of guaranteed returns should they choose Ghana as their investment destination.

    Further, Mr Oppong Nkrumah called on the diaspora investors to invest in the Ghanaian economy because as Ghanaians in the diaspora, they have a crucial role to play towards the growth and development of the country.

    The Ghana-Canada Investment Summit brought together delegates from the international investor community especially from Canada, venture capitalists and private equity fund managers amongst others for in-depth discussions and exploration of viable investment opportunities within various sectors of the Ghanaian economy. It was also aimed at matching diaspora, Canadian investors and local entrepreneurs and create awareness of the potential of Diaspora Direct Investment while increasing trade between Ghana and Canada.

    Also present at the Summit were a number of state officials, including the Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Shelly Ayorkor Botcwey, Minister of Communication and Digitalisation, Ursula Owusu-Ekuful, the Minister for Tourism and Culture, Dr Awal Ibrahim Mohammed, GIPC boss, Yofi Grant and other well-known dignitaries.

     

  • Exporters urged to be mindful of fake Certificate of Origin

    Greater Accra Regional Head of the Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GNCCI), Mr Daniel Osei Torgbor, has cautioned exporters to be mindful of the originality of Certificates of Origin (COO) that accompany their exports.

    According to him, some unscrupulous freight forwarders are generating fake certificates.

    Mr Daniel Osei Torgbor, said the phenomenon which is becoming rampant, could mar the image of the country globally and affect bilateral agreements meant to extend some privileges to Ghanaian exporters.

    Speaking to Ghana News Agency in an interview in Kumasi, he said COO was an important international trade document that certified that goods in a particular export shipment were wholly obtained, produced, manufactured and processed in a particular country.

    It also facilitates international trade and proves authenticity of the product, while providing documentary evidence of origin of the goods exported and other varieties of documentation such as packing lists, commercial invoices and proforma invoices.

    Mr. Torgbor said goods that were flagged went through checks which caused delays and the exporter was mandated to pay the full exporting cost in the instance, where the certificate of origin was confirmed to be fake.

    Therefore, he said exporters must be vigilant and entreat their freight forwarders to do the right thing since it could result in serious consequences for the nation.

    He stressed that immediate attention and action was needed to address the issues considering the role of the certificate of origin in the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA), since it was the primary document that was being used to facilitate trade.

    According to him, under AfCFTA, the rules of origin which was born out of certificate of origin would be key, and stringent measures must be taken to prevent exporters from taking advantage of products that were not properly certified across the continent in the name of AfCFTA.

    He advised exporters to provide commercial invoice packing list, customs declaration form, bill of lading, among others, to the Ghana Chamber of Commerce to help process their certificates.

    Source: GNA