Aviation Ghana

Ghana loses $50bn through capital flight in five decades

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Ghana lost $50 billion between 1970 and 2021 through Capital Flight, a study by the National Developmen­t Planning Commission (NDPC) and the University of Massachuse­tts has found.

Capital Flight is a largescale movement of financial assets and capital from a nation. The study, titled: “Capital Flight and natural resources in Ghana: the cases of gold and cocoa” found that private wealth in Ghana is growing faster than per capita income, with individual­s in the country owning $5bn in private wealth. Data from government sources and the United Nations statistica­l databases analysed by the team showed that the growth rate in private wealth in Ghana is the highest in Africa in the last 10 years (27.5 per cent).

There are 110 multimilli­onaires in Ghana who own more than $10m in private wealth each, the researcher­s also found.

The study was conducted by Professor Léonce Ndikumana, from the University of Massachuse­tts, United States; Dr William Godfred Cantah, University of Cape Coast, Ghana, and Dr Kwame Adjei-Mantey, University of Environmen­t and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, Ghana. The researcher­s, under the auspices, of the NDPC disseminat­ed the findings of the study at a workshop in Accra on Thursday. Professor Ndikumana said the study found that although Ghana had seen an increment in exports, natural resources (gold, oil, and cocoa) dominate the exports, adding that foreign exchange earnings are repatriate­d.

He said available data indicate that in 2021, cocoa, gold, and oil, accounted for 81 per cent of Ghana’s total exports, “but the exports are not earning forex.” Prof. Ndikumana said in the gold sector for instance, foreign companies were allowed to retain as much as 95 per cent of their export earnings, a situation he pointed out, had severe impact on the stability of the local currency. In the cocoa sector, the researcher­s found farmers earned four per cent of the price of the product, with a chunk of the money going to distributo­rs and processors.

Prof. Ndikumana said Capital Flight had taken an upward trend in Africa and cautioned that the continent would continue to see a decline in economic growth if it failed to take control of its natural resources.

“If we are going to auction our resources to foreign companies all the time, it will not work. You must take control of your own resources…policy decisions should be done democratic­ally; the citizens should have a say in how resources are managed,” he said.

Prof. George Gyan-Baffour, Chairman of the NDPC, said the repatriati­on of foreign exchange earnings “is at the heart of the problems we are facing” due to the negative impact it has on the strength of the local currency. “This is a phenomenon that has become a major constraint to the under-developmen­t of most African countries and requires a concerted effort to significan­tly overcome its impact on our economy,” he said.

Dr Said Boakye, the Acting Executive Director, Institute for Fiscal Studies, urged the government to employ production sharing agreement to achieve significan­t revenue from the mining sector. (Source: GNA)

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