Audio By Carbonatix
Communication Minister Sam Nartey George has dismissed suggestions that Ghana pay-TV provider, DStv's, pricing challenges are tied to the country’s market size.
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express on September 30, he argued that population has no direct link to subscription costs, contrary to popular claims.
“It’s not an issue of just market sizes, because if it was an issue of market sizes, the analysis you did, you should check how much Liberia is paying,” he said.
“Liberia has a population of five million people. That’s the population of Accra. Before we got this intervention, Liberia was paying less than us. Angola has a similar population to Ghana, about 33 million people. Angola was paying in the region of about $30.”
The Minister’s comments come on the back of a breakthrough in negotiations between government and MultiChoice Africa, providers of the service.
Ghanaian DStv subscribers are set to enjoy more value for their money from October 1, following new arrangements agreed after an engagement with the pay-TV provider.
MultiChoice Africa has committed to rolling out an “unprecedented increased value offer only in Ghana,” giving subscribers between 33% to 50% more value depending on their package.
“This new arrangement means Ghanaians will get more services for less,” Mr George said at a press briefing in Accra on September 29.
“It is a commitment by MultiChoice to respond to the concerns of subscribers in Ghana, and the offer is unmatched anywhere else in Africa.”
He described arguments that Nigeria’s low subscription rates are driven by its population size as “uninformed.”
“For those who make that uninformed argument that Nigeria’s price is low simply because of the number of the population there, then they haven’t followed through,” he said.
“They’re speaking from sentiment, and what they have heard people say on social media. They’re not speaking from fact.
"Speaking from fact, it will tell you that population does not necessarily play a role in the pricing model that has been done. Because if population played a role, Liberia should not be charging less than Ghana.”
Latest Stories
-
Developing countries paid more in debt service in 2025 – World Bank
2 minutes -
Education Minister raises concern over prolonged CETAG strike
4 minutes -
Vice President honours Nkrumah’s photographer, Chris Hesse, for safeguarding national memory
12 minutes -
3 arrested for impersonating Speaker, IGP on social media
12 minutes -
BoG to tighten monetary policy in half-year 2026
20 minutes -
Parliament approves GH₵357 billion budget for 2026
26 minutes -
MAX and Bolt announce strategic partnership to power electric mobility and vehicle ownership in Ghana
42 minutes -
Greater Accra poultry farmers association says it was excluded from gov’t ‘Nkoko nkiti nkiti’ initiative
56 minutes -
Michael Adangba survives dawn road crash en route to Bolgatanga
1 hour -
Court remands 40-year-old man for alleged murder
1 hour -
AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi mine donates fire tender to boost emergency response in municipality
1 hour -
Gov’t introduces sliding-scale mining royalties to capture price gains
1 hour -
Global Africa Summit Accra 2025 rallies investors, diaspora and policymakers to boost trade and growth
1 hour -
New research suggests a better way to fight littering in Ghana
1 hour -
UN-backed experts say Gaza food supplies improving but 100,000 still in ‘catastrophic conditions’
2 hours
