
Audio By Carbonatix
The government has announced plans to implement reforms aimed at harmonising business process standards, with an emphasis on digitising registration and tax systems to enhance efficiency.
Mrs. Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare, Minister of Trade, Agribusiness, and Industry, said this at the launch of the World Bank’s Business Ready report in Accra on Wednesday.
The report showed Ghana scored 66.99 per cent in regulatory framework, 54.42 per cent in operational efficiency, and 47.67 per cent in public services delivery.
It outperformed many Sub-Saharan Africa peers in labour market regulations (68.6), utility services (68.5), and business insolvency framework (64.9).
However, it scored between nine and 42 per cent in Business Entry, Digital Infrastructure, Market Competition, Dispute Resolution, Tax Compliance, Trade Logistics, and Financial Services.
Mrs. Ofosu-Adjare assured local and foreign businesses of the government’s commitment to tackling bottlenecks in the business environment.
“Fortunately, the Ghana Standards Authority (GSA) sits right under the Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness and Industry, so if not for anything, we should be export-ready with our standardisation,” she said.
The minister noted that business ease would improve when registration times were reduced, disputes resolved amicably, and regulatory frameworks integrated.
“That is when people will be inclined to invest in your country. If you compare it with our peers, it is obvious that we need to up our game. We are looking for FDI and export, so we are already working on some of the issues,” she stated.
Mrs. Ofosu-Adjare promised that the government would review the report to identify areas that need improvement and collaborate with stakeholders, state institutions, and the private sector to make Ghana business-ready.
Ms. Valeria Perotti, Manager for Business Ready, World Bank, noted that wealth was not a prerequisite for being business-ready but rather a favourable environment.
She said operational efficiency lagged despite the availability of regulatory frameworks, public services, and infrastructure.
Perotti attributed this to limited implementation, especially in digitalisation and inter-agency coordination, and urged the government to address these gaps.
Mr. Robert Taliercio, World Bank Country Director for Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Liberia, said that the private sector accounted for 90 per cent of jobs, 70 per cent of national output, nearly 80 per cent of investment, and 70 per cent of government revenue.
“Clearly, building an environment where businesses can flourish is non-negotiable if we are to realise Ghana’s ambitious vision, including President Mahama’s commitment to reset Ghana’s economy and develop a 24-hour economy,” he said.
He called for bold reforms to empower businesses to thrive, compete, and create jobs.
Latest Stories
-
NRSA declares commercial use of Toyota Voxy illegal
2 minutes -
Police hunt suspects after gunfire triggers chaos at Kotoku Onion Market
5 minutes -
Health Ministry partners private sector to boost public education on safe healthcare practices
16 minutes -
GhIE demands independent audit of GH¢110bn Big Push road programme
17 minutes -
Heavy rainstorm causes power outages in Ashanti Region – ECG
17 minutes -
Abuakwa MP supports constituents to mark Easter celebration
19 minutes -
CAF U-17 AFCON: Ghana handed tricky opponents in Group D
21 minutes -
Manhyia South MP decries unchecked commercialisation of residential areas, warns of extinction
22 minutes -
U-17 AFCON 2026: Ghana drawn in tough group as Black Starlets eye World Cup return
23 minutes -
NRSA recommends strict enforcement of laws banning right-hand drive imports
31 minutes -
‘Don’t belittle our intelligence’ – Methodist Bishop criticises Kwakye Ofosu over LGBTQ comment
31 minutes -
Ghana’s crude oil output declines for 6th consecutive year – PIAC
34 minutes -
$434m in oil revenue allocated to Big Push Programme — PIAC
35 minutes -
Ghana’s oil production hits 694 million barrels since 2010 – PIAC report
43 minutes -
Ghana records 7.5% economic growth in January 2026, services sector leads expansion
47 minutes