Hon. Felix Ofosu Kwakye, the Minister for Government Communications, has defended the recent fiscal balances of the Bank of Ghana (BoG) and the Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod), characterising the recorded expenditures as vital structural investments rather than systemic failures.
Addressing critics who have weaponised the reported losses to question the state’s extractive and financial sector interventions, the Minister explained that the monetary outlays represent necessary, one-off operational costs deployed to safeguard national wealth.
He emphasized that these calculated expenditures were strategically designed to avert a recurrence of past economic instability, functioning primarily as protective buffers for local businesses and private citizens.
By absorbing these unavoidable initial establishment and transactional friction costs, the government successfully built a resilient framework capable of insulating domestic stakeholders from volatile global commodity markets.
“These mostly one-off costs were absolutely vital for the preservation and protection of incomes of Ghanaian households and business. Today, look at the interest regime. But of course, it has come with a cost.”
Hon. Felix Ofosu Kwakye

Hon. Kwakye Ofosu argued that the apparent short-term losses on the central bank’s balance sheet must be contextualized within the broader framework of macro-fiscal stabilization.
The Minister highlighted that the establishment of GoldBod and its integrated procurement and gold-purchasing channels required significant upfront capital mobilization to transition away from inefficient historical structures.
According to government communications minister, these initial expenditures directly facilitated an unprecedented influx of over $3 billion into the formal economy within a four-month period by centralizing small-scale gold trading and squeezing out informal, unrecorded export rings.
Furthermore, by formalizing the gold value chain, the state successfully generated alternative foreign exchange reserves that alleviated intense pressure on the Ghanaian Cedi.
The Minister maintained that viewing these institutional setup expenditures through a narrow lens of pure deficit spending overlooks the immense systemic benefits realized across the wider commercial landscape.
From Macro Losses to Tangible Private Dividends
To understand how these fiscal adjustments transformed the domestic market, a thorough examination of Ghana’s macroeconomic indicators reveals a drastic shift in the commercial credit ecosystem.

Prior to these strategic gold-backed structural interventions, the central bank was forced to manage a hyper-inflationary environment that pushed commercial lending rates above the 30 percent threshold.
This prohibitive interest regime effectively choked private sector growth, restricted capital expenditure, and limited the capacity of indigenous companies to expand their operations.
By strategically deploying central bank assets and utilizing GoldBod’s centralized purchasing power to anchor currency stability, the state engineered a rapid decompression in cost-of-capital metrics.
Current banking data confirms that standard commercial loans have dramatically tumbled to average rates hovering between 15 and 16 percent.
For capital-intensive operations within the extractive, mining support, and processing sectors, this downward trend represents an extraordinary relief mechanism.
The steep reduction in borrowing costs directly frees up corporate cash flows, enabling mining services and general businesses to aggressively reinvest in infrastructure, expand local supply chains, and initiate large-scale recruitment drives for skilled team leaders.
Securing Structural Efficiency for the Extractive Future
The long-term economic trajectory of the West African nation depends heavily on moving away from historical vulnerabilities toward robust institutional design.

Government officials have reiterated that the overarching objective of enduring short-term balance sheet deficits is to forge a highly synchronized, transparent extractive framework that prevents the economy from sliding back into severe currency depreciation crises.
In past cycles, unrecorded gold left the country through porous channels, depriving the central bank of the vital foreign currency needed to back international obligations and defend the local currency.
Moving forward, regulatory policies will focus on strengthening the capacity of GoldBod to purchase gold entirely in local currency, while utilizing the converted dollar proceeds to systematically rebuild national external reserves.
The administration has given assurances that stringent measures are currently being institutionalized across both the central bank and its subsidiaries to ensure that setup costs are strictly contained and not repeated in future fiscal cycles.
This dual mechanism of lower interest rates and optimized resource management creates a sustainable, mutually beneficial environment where the state retains value from its mineral wealth while the private sector thrives under a stabilized financial regime.
READ ALSO: Kwakye Ofosu Blasts GBA Over Silence on Afenyo’s Judge Attack











