
Audio By Carbonatix
The State Interests and Governance Authority (SIGA) has launched the 2024 State Ownership Report (SOR), providing an in-depth analysis of the financial and operational performance of Ghana’s State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs), Joint Venture Companies (JVCs), and Other State Entities (OSEs).
The report, unveiled in Accra on Friday, 29th August 2025, marks the ninth edition of the series and the fourth produced by SIGA since its establishment in 2019.
According to the statement, it is intended as a tool to guide policymakers, stakeholders, and the public in evaluating the effectiveness of state entities as engines of growth and providers of essential services.
“Through rigorous analysis and data-driven insights, we aim to inform stakeholders and drive meaningful dialogue around the future of our State-Owned Enterprises, Joint Venture Companies, and Other State Entities,” said Acting Director-General of SIGA, Professor Michael Kpessa-Whyte.
The 2024 SOR covers 152 specified entities, up from 147 in the previous year, reflecting expanded oversight. For the first time in three decades, the State Housing Company paid dividends to government, joining two other entities Ghana Reinsurance Company and TDC Company Ltd in contributing GH¢29.36 million, a 78.88 per cent rise from 2023.
The report also highlighted persistent gender gaps within state entities. Women made up only 29.67 per cent of the total workforce in 2024, while female representation at executive management and board levels remained below the 30 per cent threshold mandated by the newly enacted Affirmative Action Act, 2024.
Youth participation was described as “alarmingly low,” with only 2.61 per cent of employees aged below 25.
On the policy front, the report highlighted reforms including the adoption of the State Ownership Policy and a new Code of Corporate Governance, both launched in 2024 to standardise governance practices across public institutions.
The Minister for Finance, Cassiel Ato Forson, conceded that challenges persist, particularly in the operational weaknesses and debts of SOEs. However, he stressed that government remains committed to enforcing fiscal discipline and restructuring poorly performing entities under the IMF-supported Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG).
“The expectations of the Ghanaian people are that SOEs must deliver and offer an attractive value proposition as their shareholders,” Dr Forson said, urging SIGA to impose sanctions on non-compliant entities.
SIGA reiterated its pledge to strengthen transparency, accountability, and fiscal responsibility, working with the Ministry of Finance to ensure that specified entities play a central role in Ghana’s economic recovery and long-term development.
Latest Stories
-
Good governance requires consultation – GUTA faults utility tariff increase process
39 minutes -
‘Floodwaters do not discriminate’ – Asenso-Boakye urges unity against flooding
39 minutes -
‘We woke up to the announcement’ – GUTA slams lack of consultation on utility tariff hike
58 minutes -
GUTA challenges utility tariff increase, says strong cedi should have led to price cuts
2 hours -
‘Why increase utility tariffs?’ – GUTA says economic indicators point the other way
3 hours -
A plane crashed into a tower in Beijing but China is not saying what happened
3 hours -
Beyond Gold: Why Ghana must build strategic national reserves for the next global crisis
3 hours -
South Africa’s anti-migrant protesters march nationwide, after thousands flee violence
5 hours -
Ebola outbreak could cost Africa up to $3.6 billion, UN says
5 hours -
Bayer’s $7.25 billion Roundup settlement gets August hearing date
5 hours -
TikTok to settle with teen plaintiff before California social media trial, law firm says
5 hours -
Mbappe scores twice as France breeze past Sweden into last 16
5 hours -
Chinese tycoon sentenced to 30 years in US jail
5 hours -
Apple says it is releasing updates early in response to AI cybersecurity concerns
6 hours -
Boeing says IT outage affected computer systems, applications
6 hours