Audio By Carbonatix
Professor of Finance and Economics at the University of Ghana, Godfred Bokpin, has criticised Ghana’s budgetary framework, arguing that it enables state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to underperform without consequence.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show on Monday, September 1, during a discussion on the latest State Ownership Report by the State Interests and Governance Authority (SIGA), Prof. Bokpin said SOEs are routinely supported with state resources regardless of performance.
“It’s more of the same. There’s no incentive to do well and better. This country has accepted this poor performance and we reward it adequately,” he said.
According to him, the national budget annually makes provisions to subsidise SOEs, often with taxpayers’ money, leaving little motivation for improvement.
“In 2023, if you look at our national budget, you’ll find under the resource allocation framework an item called ‘other expenditure.’ This covers energy sector levies and transfers to meet energy sector shortfalls and other SOEs, just to keep them afloat apart from the revenue they generate from their core activities,” he explained.
Prof. Bokpin said inefficiencies are passed on to citizens through levies such as the Energy Sector Levy (ESLA) and the recently introduced one-cedi fuel levy.
“If you look at the kind of incentive mechanism we’ve put in place, really there’s very little motivation to do well because there are no punishments linked to poor performance, and nobody gets sacked,” he stressed.
Political Patronage and Rising Costs
The professor further argued that many SOEs have become channels for political patronage rather than efficiency.
“If you lift the veil, you realise that some of these SOEs have become the medium through which politicians reward political financiers and party loyalists. That weakens our ability to demand efficiency from them,” he said.
He pointed to the steady rise in allocations for “other expenditure” in recent budgets, noting that the figure increased from GH₵23.7 billion in 2023 to GH₵27.7 billion in 2024, and further to GH₵33.6 billion in 2025, even higher than capital expenditure allocations.
Prof. Bokpin also claimed some SOE executives enjoy greater perks than sector ministers with far less scrutiny.
“It is sometimes better to be a CEO of some of these SOEs or a senior person in those organisations than being a sector minister because of the reward mechanisms and the less monitoring by citizens and the media,” he observed.
He further questioned the sharp rise in administrative costs of SOEs compared to private firms in similar sectors.
“The other thing to also look at is to see some of these state-owned enterprises and see the rise in their administrative cost, over a period, and then you can compare that to similar companies in the private sector along those same lines, and you will see inefficiency.
“Even though the SIGA report says there have been gains in operational efficiency, if you do sector comparisons where there are relevant private companies, you will see inefficiency that is ultimately passed on to the taxpayer,” Prof. Bokpin added.
Latest Stories
-
Why not clean energy: Cost or access?
2 minutes -
Minority sounds alarm over fuel shortages crippling Ghana’s fishing communities
3 minutes -
Minority calls for urgent action to shield farmers from rising production challenges
6 minutes -
AGRA Ghana salutes Farmers as nation marks Farmers’ Day
21 minutes -
Bawumia’s favourability rises, widens lead in new Global Info analytics survey
23 minutes -
Minority accuses gov’t of neglect after GH¢5bn rice left to waste
29 minutes -
Why Tsatsu Tsikata’s legacy is Ghana’s future
33 minutes -
Farmers need support all year, not just awards’ — Prof. Boadi
42 minutes -
Spotify ranks ‘Konnected Minds’ Ghana’s No. 1 Podcast for 2025
45 minutes -
Minority caucus push for modern AI-driven agricultural and fisheries revolution
46 minutes -
Mahama reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to ending HIV/AIDS by 2030
46 minutes -
Martin Kpebu poised to defend claims against Special Prosecutor – Counsel
51 minutes -
Kareweh criticises govts for policies that look good but achieve little in agriculture
53 minutes -
Galamsey is killing our cocoa, our water, our future – Minority warns of food security meltdown
56 minutes -
Keta is drowning, not fishing – Minority demands urgent fix to premix fuel breakdown
1 hour
