As Ghana continues its journey toward economic transformation, the role of agribusiness has taken center stage. Amid these developments, the Ghana Chamber of Young Entrepreneurs, in collaboration with 2SCALE, a Dutch-funded programme focused on inclusive agribusiness development in Sub-Saharan Africa has hosted the Impact Drivers Seminar.
This will help advance conversations around equity, sustainability, and shared prosperity in agribusiness.
The President of the Ghana Chamber of Young Entrepreneurs, Sherif Ghali, has called for a paradigm shift towards inclusive and sustainable business models in Ghana’s agribusiness sector, emphasizing their potential to unlock the country’s economic growth and improve livelihoods.
He made the remarks at the Impact Drivers Seminar organized by the Ghana Chamber of Young Entrepreneurs in collaboration with 2SCALE, a programme focused on inclusive agribusiness.

According to Mr. Ghali, "We want to get the inclusive business model out there and start looking at how Ghanaian indigenous businesses can adopt the model to be able to reach out.
Ghana is one of the countries and our economy need inclusive business more, so that we just don't do business for profit, but we do business for impact, and that's why we say your impact will drive your returns".
Echoing his sentiments, Jail Zakaria, Country Team Leader for 2SCALE, urged the government to institutionalize inclusive business practices as a national standard. He believes making inclusivity a criterion for doing business in Ghana will support vulnerable communities, especially those at the base of the pyramid, and enhance food security.

"Given that Ghana is shifting towards the golden age of business, it is important for us either as governments or as development practitioners to begin to include inclusive business criteria in how we engage business. For instance, if the government is holding out their 24-hour economic policy, can they include things like inclusive business as a criteria in terms of the evaluation that we do? And that is how we can get inclusive business on a wider scale", he stated.
The Impact Drivers Seminar served as a platform for stakeholders to explore collaborative efforts in building equitable business ecosystems that cater to all segments of society, particularly within the agribusiness space.

Latest Stories
-
GJA 2025 Elections: Full list of qualified candidates announced
8 minutes -
Ghana Horticulture Expo 2025: Agriculture key to Ghana’s development – Mahama
10 minutes -
GAUA-KNUST members receive training in peer-reviewed publishing and grantsmanship
21 minutes -
Private citizen petitions Mahama to sack GIFEC CEO Tanko Rashid-Computer over alleged ‘fake’ PhD
58 minutes -
Quarry operators warn of nationwide shutdown over encroachment threats
1 hour -
Ecobank Ghana approves GH₵0.34 dividend for 2024, records GH₵5.4bn revenue
1 hour -
Ga East MCE engages Ga Chiefs to foster developmental unity
1 hour -
Mahama pardons 64 radio stations sanctioned by NCA
2 hours -
Over 1.1 million children trapped in labour – CHRAJ warns
2 hours -
8 BECE candidates injured in fatal crash, denied exam after late arrival
2 hours -
GNFS saves majority of cargo in trailer fire on Accra-Kumasi highway
2 hours -
Telecel Ghana launches “Too Much Money” promo with GHS1.2m grand prize
2 hours -
Government, CIMG deepen collaboration to support brand Ghana Agenda
2 hours -
Government vows to recover unauthorised payments to Zoomlion
2 hours -
KNUST Mastercard Scholars hand over cluster of projects to Ayigya Basic School
2 hours