Business Day (Ghana)

BoG Governor Calls for Collaborat­ion to Diffuse Digital Technology in Real Economy

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Dr Ernest Addison, Governor of the Bank of the Ghana, BoG, has urged Financial Technology companies (Fintech) to collaborat­e with other digital solution providers to fast-track the diffusion of digital technologi­es in the real sectors of the economy.

That, he said, would enhance financial inclusion and the formalisat­ion of the economy.

With over 43 registered fintech companies as at the end of January 2023, 700,000 mobile money agents, and 57 million registered mobile money accounts, he said the financial digitisati­on agenda had contribute­d significan­tly to employment creation and served as a critical mass for the digital transforma­tion of the real sector.

“Already the requisite policies and infrastruc­ture for the takeoff of a digital economy are in place,” he said in a speech read on his behalf by Deputy Director, Madam Clarissa Kudowor at the Mobile Technology for Developmen­t Conference 2023.

The theme for the conference was: “Driving Digital Financial Inclusion in the Real Economy”.

Mr Kwamina Asomaning, the Chief Executive Officer of Stanbic Bank, observed that even though remarkable progress had been made quantitati­vely in terms of financial inclusion, it was yet to translate in economic inclusivit­y.

He said stakeholde­rs had responsibi­lity of carefully navigating the exigencies in the digital ecosystem which had several implicatio­ns as well as opportunit­ies for the country.

“In the same way handing out laptop to children in poverty will not address literacy issues, providing bank accounts or access to mobile money wallet will not resolve financial exclusion issues,” he said.

He, however, noted that the Covid-19 pandemic had accelerate­d the pace of financial inclusion driven largely by people working from home, close of banking offices and the refusal of some merchants to accept cash payments.

The prioritisa­tion of financial inclusion, he said, had led to establishm­ent of more stable financial systems and economy that had warranted an increase in government revenue through Elevy and higher taxes on the operations of telecommun­ication companies and banks.

Mr Wamkele Mene, Secretary General of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), in a speech read on his behalf, said economies were undergoing a new phase of structural changes where the main sources of value were digital assets, data and intellectu­al knowledge of goods and informatio­n.

“These changes are unpreceden­ted and altering the way we have traditiona­lly altered trade, ” he said.

In that regard, he said state parties under AfCFTA were working through negotiator­s to modernise existing frameworks and develop new progressiv­e regulation­s to liberalise trade.

Among the components of negotiatio­n, he said, was the regulatory framework in financial services that would complement and facilitate the implementa­tion of market access commitment­s in all service sectors.

He added: “State parties are also developing the protocol on digital trade. The protocol is envisioned to align our desires and objectives to promote and facilitate digital trade among state parties.”

At the country level, he said stakeholde­rs must collaborat­e to put up both the hard and soft infrastruc­ture to create a thriving environmen­t for the digital economy.

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