Ghana, 7 others to start trade under AfCFTA

Ghana and seven other countries will soon start exchanging goods and services under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).  

The move is part of efforts to diversify and increase export among African countries through Export Trading Companies (ETCs) while achieving the Continent’s industrialisation drive and making it economically self-reliant.  

Mr Herbert Krapa, Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry (MoTI), said this at a seminar to sensitise African countries on the role of ETCs in easing intra-African trade under the AfCFTA in Accra on Monday.  

Organised by the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and MoTI, the event also discussed how ETCs were operated, supported, and regulated by Governments and other agencies.  

Mr Krapa said: “Actual trading is starting between Cameroon, Egypt, Kenya, Mauritius, Rwanda, Tanzania, Tunisia, and Ghana. In the coming weeks, the dream of our forebears will be off the ground.”  

He said the Secretariat had launched the AfCFTA Initiative on Guided Trade to translate all the progress on paper into action to make the continent’s industrial revolution and its ability for self-reliance attainable.  

“Trading goods and services from Harare in Bamako or Kigali, or exporting processed cocoa from Accra to the entire northern African region should no longer be a nightmare if we make the appropriate investments into ETCs,” Mr Krapa said.  

The Deputy Minister explained that ETCs would make Africa leave no one behind in the regional value chain particularly small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), young entrepreneurs, startups, light manufacturers as well as big industries.  

These value-chain players will be providing export and import services, warehousing, transportation, finance, insurance, risk management and market intelligence, around which the free trade area will thrive.   

He, therefore, encouraged Governments and private sector players to have the right policy, finance, institutional framework, productive capacity and infrastructure to enjoy the benefits that AfCFTA provided.  

Touching on the current global economy, the Deputy Minister reechoed the need for Ghana and other African countries to pursue industrialisation and be self-reliant.  

“As government institutions, exporters, financing firms, manufacturers, SMEs, and everyone else in the export ecosystem, we should all be energised to set up Ghanaian owned or partnered ETCs both domestically and across Africa. Africa’s industrial revolution must be realised at all costs,” the Deputy Minister said.  

Dr Gainmore Zanamwe, Senior Manager of Trade Facilitation, Afreximbank, said the lack of access to market intelligence was impeding growth of ETCs in Africa, and contributing to inability of Member States to know what other countries were producing and needed.  

He said that though ETCs were ineffective in many African countries, they were critical in helping the growth of smallholder farmers and traders through the aggregation and bulk purchase of goods produced.  

Dr Zanamwe highlighted the benefits of industrialisation, noting that it helped in adding value to raw materials produced to increase revenue and job creation and called for the enabling environment to make ETCs thrive in Africa.  

President suspends PPA boss

President Akufo-Addo has suspended from office with immediate effect, the Chief Executive of the Public Procurement Authority (PPA), Adjenim Boateng Adjei.

The action follows the public broadcast of some allegations leveled against him in a investigative piece conducted by freelance journalist, Manasseh Azure Awuni.

The ‘Contract For Sale’ documentary featured the PPA boss allegedly selling government contracts through his own private company, Talent Discovery Limited (TDL).

A press release from the Presidency Thursday afternoon said: “President Akufo-Addo has, subsequently, referred the allegations involving conflict of interest to the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), and those relating to potential acts of corruption to the Office of Special Prosecutor, for their prompt action.

The President has also notified the Chairperson of the Board of the PPA to ensure
that Mr. AB Adjei hands over his office expeditiously to Mr. Frank Mante, the Deputy
Chief Executive Officer of the PPA.,” the statement further noted.

Over 1,400 workers of GN Savings and Loans to lose their jobs

It is estimated that over 1,400 workers of GN Savings and Loans would lose their jobs in the coming weeks.

The expected dismissal comes at the back of the revocation of the license of the company which was downgraded from a Bank to a Savings and Loans earlier this year for failing to meet the new minimum capital requirement for banks.

Government has appointed a receiver to lead the process of payment of depositors and debt recovery.

On Friday, August 16, 2019, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) announced that “the Bank of Ghana has reached the conclusion that GN is currently insolvent under section 123 (4) of the Banks and SDIs Act, 2016 (Act 930), being in breach of its key prudential regulatory requirements. Its Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) is currently -61%, in breach of the minimum required of 13%. It is also facing a severe liquidity crisis with numerous complaints received by the Financial Stability Department of the Bank of Ghana from aggrieved customers who have been unable to access their deposits with the institution for the last several months. What is more, it has consistently failed to meet the minimum cash reserve requirement of 10% of its total deposits, since the end of the first quarter of 2019.

GN’s shareholders have failed to restore the bank to the required regulatory capital and liquidity levels in spite of long-standing promises that new capital was expected from foreign investors.”

While the company was operating over 240 branches across the country with presence in almost all districts in Ghana, sources at the company say over 1,400 workers may lose their jobs.

Most branches may be closed down, the source added.

Cashiers, mobile bankers, drivers, security and cleaners may be the casualties.