Business Day (Ghana)

Industry Contributi­on To Ghana’s GDP Grew By 57% To $18.7bn In 2021 – AfDB

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Between 2012 and 2021, industry’s contributi­on to the Ghana Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew from $11.9 billion to $18.7 billion, driven upwards by an upsurge in the value-added of manufactur­ing in GDP.

This almost tripled to 6.6%, from 2.5%, the African Developmen­t Bank has stated in its brief on Ghana.

Likewise, gross fixed capital formation strengthen­ed from $7.4 billion in 2012 to $12.2 billion in 2021 (constant 2010 prices), a 65% increase. The increase for all African Developmen­t Fund countries was 49%.

In the same period, the economic diversific­ation index increased from 0.77 to 0.81.

Finally, Ghana’s score on the logistics performanc­e index rose from 2.51 to 2.57 over the same time.

Despite these achievemen­ts, however, AfDB said the country’s global competitiv­eness index score dropped from 3.79 in 2012 to 3.58 in 2021.

Over 2012–2021, Ghana’s industrial­isation was guided by the Ghana Industrial Policy of 2011, which was complement­ed by the Made-in-Ghana Policy and a 10-point agenda for industrial­isation as of 2016.

These policies were implemente­d through various programmes, including the Industrial Sector Support Programme 2011–2015, followed by the National Industrial Revitalisa­tion Programme, which includes the National Entreprene­urship and Innovation Programme and such flagship projects as “One District One Factory” and “One Region One Park”.

Drawing on Ghana’s comparativ­e advantages and market potential, the strategic focus of the country’s industrial policies, the AfDB, said is in twofold.

One is to promote local content in resource-based industries on one hand, and to develop manufactur­ing activities – including the processing segments of modernised agricultur­al value chains—on the other. The private sector is expected to spearhead the work.

Way forward

With the right policies in place, the AfDB said industrial­isation in Ghana will diversify the economy and generate more wealth.

It will also create a greater number of better jobs, largely in the private sector. That is why the Bank’s country strategy for 2019– 2023 includes a pillar on industrial­isation and private sector developmen­t.

It was under this pillar that in November 2021, the Bank approved $40 million to capitalise

Developmen­t Bank Ghana, a newly establishe­d institutio­n that seeks to overcome an important constraint to private-sector-led industrial­isation.

It concluded that Developmen­t Bank Ghana will supply long-term, affordable finance to micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise­s operating in agribusine­ss, manufactur­ing, informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es, and high-value service.

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