Audio By Carbonatix
The government of Ghana has reaffirmed its commitment to partnering with Africa’s financial leaders to build a continent “where profit coexists with purpose, and risks become catalysts for innovation.”
This assurance came from Nana Oye Bampoe Addo, Deputy Chief of Staff at the presidency, during the 2025 Conference of African Chief Financial Officers (CACFO) held in Accra.
She emphasised that Africa’s institutional strength depends on Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) ensuring efficiency through value-for-money principles, transparency, and accountability.
“Finance leaders hold the keys to sustainable progress. Our institutions must not only be profitable but purposeful, serving society while driving innovation,” she stated.
The annual CACFO summit has become a strategic forum for African CFOs to reflect on shared challenges in managing complex financial portfolios amid global uncertainties.
With the lingering effects of the pandemic, geopolitical tensions, and economic volatility, the role of CFOs has become increasingly critical to corporate stability and growth.
This year’s edition, themed “Profit, Risk and Scalability,” explored emerging issues shaping financial leadership on the continent. Discussions covered Sustainable Financing and ESG, AfCFTA and trade finance, Artificial Intelligence (AI) in African project finance, credit and liquidity management, and corporate governance and risk in post-pandemic Africa.
Executive Director of CACFO, Ms Hannah Awuku, told journalists that the conference, one of the largest gatherings of finance executives in Africa, provides an invaluable platform for exchanging ideas and best practices. “It is a space where experience meets aspiration, where today’s leaders inspire tomorrow’s innovators,” she said.
Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Export-Import Bank (GEXIM), Mr Sylvester Adinam Mensah, in his keynote address, urged Africa’s financial leaders to move “from managing volatility to designing resilience; from reacting to global trends to shaping them.”
He called for deliberate steps to strengthen intra-African financial systems, including interoperable payment networks, unified credit markets, and robust cross-border investment frameworks.
Mr Mensah also underscored the need for deeper collaboration between development finance institutions and private capital to drive industrialisation and green transition across the continent.
He further highlighted the importance of investing in the next generation of CFOs, particularly young and female finance leaders, whose innovation and diversity, he said, “will redefine the future of Africa’s financial leadership.”
Latest Stories
-
OMCs begin fuel price cuts as Star Oil and Goil sell petrol at GH¢13.25
2 minutes -
Two dead, 4 arrested as police bust robbery gang in Upper East
7 minutes -
We’re finalising new Labour Law to protect every worker in the gig economy and beyond – Mahama
29 minutes -
Mali at the Crossroads: Sovereignty without Stability?
37 minutes -
Watch how the Bank of Ghana recorded a GH¢15.6 billion loss in 2025, its 2nd largest loss since 2008
44 minutes -
Mahama announces Independent Emoluments Commission to overhaul public sector pay and pension review
50 minutes -
Economic stability only foundational, the real task is to build a better life for our people – Prez Mahama
54 minutes -
May Day: We’re almost at crisis level on jobs – Organised Labour tells gov’t
1 hour -
FH Depot’s Freda Donkor honoured as top FMCG distribution CEO at Ghana Titans Awards
1 hour -
Decent jobs for youth remain priority under Reset Ghana Agenda – Mahama
1 hour -
Prof Humphrey Danso urges focus on applied research to tackle national challenges
1 hour -
We’re turning stability into opportunity – Mahama on Ghana’s economic reset
1 hour -
Dr Patrick Essien promotes TVET as key to jobs and industrial growth at Mampong career programme
1 hour -
Akosombo Hydroelectric Dam fully operational, engineers have restored all six turbines – Mahama
2 hours -
HSWU Women’s Committee urges government to regularise casual health workers
2 hours