Audio By Carbonatix
The Second Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG), Matilda Asante Asiedu, has emphasised that Africa’s integration is not merely a policy framework but a process that directly impacts people and businesses across the continent.
Speaking at the 2026 Africa Prosperity Dialogue under the theme, “Empowering SMEs, Women and Youth in Africa’s Single Market: Innovate, Collaborate, Trade”, she said the success of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) depends on practical measures that allow individuals and enterprises to trade efficiently across borders.
“Africa’s integration is not an abstract policy. It is about people. It’s about whether a young innovator in Accra, a woman trader in Kisangani, or a small enterprise in Lusaka can access markets across borders with confidence and efficiency,” Mrs Asante Asiedu said.
She highlighted efficient cross-border payments and digital finance systems as critical enablers of continental trade. Without secure, affordable, and reliable payment systems, the promise of a truly integrated African market cannot be realised, she added.
“Payments make trade possible. Trade agreements alone do not create trade. Payment systems are strategic infrastructure essential for monetary stability, financial integration, and long-term economic transformation,” she noted.
Despite Africa’s enormous economic potential, Mrs Asante Asiedu said cross-border payments remain expensive, slow, and fragmented, with transaction costs ranging between 7 to 10%, compared to a global average of about 3%.
Settlement times, she said, can also take days to weeks, posing significant challenges for SMEs and traders.
She stressed that addressing these issues presents not only challenges but also opportunities to drive financial innovation and empower entrepreneurs across the continent.
Africa’s integration, according to her, should therefore focus on creating inclusive, practical solutions that benefit citizens and businesses alike, ensuring that economic growth is accessible to all, particularly youth, women, and small enterprises.
Latest Stories
-
25 MDAs sign data-sharing pact with Ghana Statistical Service
2 minutes -
Legacy Girls’ College celebrates national recognition of two students at 2025 WASSCE
8 minutes -
Oil price jumps despite deal to release record amount of reserves
17 minutes -
Sahara Group commissions 40,000cbm Asharami Ghana LPG vessel to advance clean energy access in Ghana
24 minutes -
Ghana’s Ambassador to Côte d’Ivoire marks 69th independence day with call to ‘build prosperity and restore hope’
26 minutes -
COCOBOD to distribute 27,000 sprayers and 89,000 PPE sets to cocoa farmers
35 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour accuses NDC of ‘double standards’ over presidential travel
41 minutes -
Israel–Iran war shakes global insurance industry; Ghana may face heavy impact – Dr Kingsley Agyemang
43 minutes -
DJ Mensah calls for national support for Rapperholic UK as Sarkodie eyes O2 Arena
46 minutes -
COCOBOD disburses GH¢4.2bn to Licensed Buying Companies to settle cocoa farmers’ arrears
48 minutes -
Rebecca Ekpe launches mentorship programme for young journalists and digital creators
49 minutes -
Home Support: How we can use Ghanaians living in the diaspora to form supporter groups for the 2026 World Cup and save millions
56 minutes -
NPP communicator, Senyo Amekplenu seeks audit service expenditure details under RTI
1 hour -
British man charged in Dubai for alleged filming of Iranian missiles
1 hour -
The mirage of president’s special initiatives – Mahama’s “Legacy Projects”, or another monuments of waste?
1 hour
