Close Menu
News Guide Africa
    What's Hot

    COMOG mourns the demise of Dagbon Overlord, Naa Gbewaa Mahama Abukari II

    July 15, 2026

    HELP Foundation Africa Commends Government for Revoking E.I. 144, Restoring Achimota Forest Reserve

    July 15, 2026

    Kasoa Odikro extends heartfelt appreciation to Stephen Agyare for modernizing palace secretariat

    July 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • COMOG mourns the demise of Dagbon Overlord, Naa Gbewaa Mahama Abukari II
    • HELP Foundation Africa Commends Government for Revoking E.I. 144, Restoring Achimota Forest Reserve
    • Kasoa Odikro extends heartfelt appreciation to Stephen Agyare for modernizing palace secretariat
    • Ghana Medical Infrastructure Boom: Korle Bu’s new Cardiac Lab signals lucrative openings for private capital and medical tourism
    • Ghana wastes GH¢6.2bn annually to poor sanitation amid underfunding crisis
    • Traders and Standards Authority find common ground on Ghana EasyPass scheme
    • NDC Regional Races: Momentum surges for Joseph Abakah as frontrunner for Central regional Organizer position
    • Regulatory risks flare as GRA seals Electrochem’s administrative hub in GH¢8.6mn tax standoff
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    News Guide Africa
    • Home
    • News
    • Politics
    • Agric and Environment
    • Sports
    • Mining & Energy
    • Lifestyle
    News Guide Africa
    Home » Govt to leverage PPPs to close $37bn annual infrastructure gap – Dep. Finance Minister
    Economy and Finance

    Govt to leverage PPPs to close $37bn annual infrastructure gap – Dep. Finance Minister

    Adnan AdamsBy Adnan AdamsSeptember 17, 2025No Comments17 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The government says it is intensifying efforts to unlock the potential of Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) to close Ghana’s widening infrastructure deficit, estimated at $37 billion annually over the next three decades.

    Delivering the keynote address at the KPMG Infrastructure Roadshow in Accra, the Deputy Minister for Finance, Thomas Nyarko Ampem, said traditional financing models alone are no longer sufficient to meet the scale of Ghana’s infrastructure needs, making PPPs indispensable.

    “The public purse alone cannot do this. The fiscal space is tight. The demands are huge. The journey is long. PPPs are therefore not just desirable, they are indispensable,” Mr. Ampem stressed.

    Infrastructure underperformance

    The Deputy Minister painted a sobering picture of Ghana’s infrastructure record. Citing data from the World Bank-supported Global Infrastructure Hub, he noted that Ghana scores 47 out of 100 in infrastructure quality – ten points below the average for lower-middle-income countries.

    Additionally, Ghana invests about 5.0 percent of GDP in infrastructure, which falls short of the LMIC average of 5.4 percent. This has translated into a financing gap of 2.8 percent of GDP, far higher than the 1.7 percent average for its peers.

    “These figures confirm what citizens feel daily,” he said. “City residents cry for better transport systems, industries require reliable and cheaper energy, farmers need irrigation, and our young people demand the digital highways of tomorrow.”

    Big Push initiative

    To confront these challenges, Mr. Ampem announced that government has reallocated significant portions of petroleum revenues and mineral royalties under the Big Push Initiative to finance large-scale infrastructure.

    He said government plans to invest GH¢13.9 billion into the flagship policy, rising to GH¢21.2 billion by 2028 . This is expected to shift capital expenditure upward by 0.5 percent of GDP during the period, even as the administration pursues fiscal consolidation.

    “This is not just a peppering over the cracks. It is an economic reset backed by a US$10 billion Big Push for infrastructure development,” the Deputy Minister declared.

    Strengthening systems for value for money

    The Deputy Finance Minister also revealed ongoing reforms in Ghana’s Public Financial Management (PFM) system to ensure infrastructure contracts deliver value for money.

    He cited an audit by the Ministry of Roads and Highways which found that arrears of GH¢113 million owed to contractors in 2018 had ballooned to GH¢665 million in interest by 2025 due to delays and weak controls.

    “Clearly, we were paying more in interest than in actual road construction. This cannot continue,” he said.

    To prevent recurrence, he said government through Parliament has amended the Public Procurement Act to ensure that all contracts must have approved budgetary allocations before commencement. He said the Ministry has also set up a PFM Compliance Division to monitor adherence to commitment controls and procurement regulations.

    PPPs as a solution

    Despite these reforms, Mr. Ampem admitted that public funds alone are inadequate to meet Ghana’s infrastructure demand. He argued that PPPs provide an opportunity to bring in private sector capital, expertise, and efficiency to complement government resources.

    By leveraging PPPs, he said, Ghana could improve service quality, spread risks more effectively, and accelerate economic transformation. However, he acknowledged challenges such as low awareness of PPPs, capacity constraints in structuring projects, and regulatory bottlenecks that slow down transactions.

    Government, he assured, is committed to addressing these hurdles and creating an enabling environment for private sector participation.

    Call to partnership

    The Deputy Minister urged both local and international investors to seize the opportunities in energy, transport, digital infrastructure, and urban development to partner government in closing the infrastructure gap.

    “The framework is set. The vision is clear. The resolve for further PPP reform is strong. The leadership from President Mahama is committed,” he said. “Your technical expertise, innovation, and capital are not just welcome; they are essential.”

    He concluded with a call to collective action, invoking an African proverb “If you want to go fast, go alone; if you want to go far, go together. The journey ahead for Ghana’s infrastructure demands that we go together with strong participation from the private sector.”

    The KPMG Infrastructure Roadshow brought together policymakers, financiers, engineers, and business leaders to deliberate on innovative models for financing Ghana’s infrastructure needs under the theme “Unlocking Ghana’s Public Private Partnership Potential: Bridging Reform and Results.”

    BIG PUSH Finance ministry Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs)
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Adnan Adams
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Traders and Standards Authority find common ground on Ghana EasyPass scheme

    July 15, 2026

    Regulatory risks flare as GRA seals Electrochem’s administrative hub in GH¢8.6mn tax standoff

    July 15, 2026

    Cocoa Revolution: Ghana taps Gulf markets to anchor domestic cocoa processing boom

    July 15, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    BREAKING: Another helicopter crashes in Kenya, Several Feared Dead

    August 7, 20251,873

    Alpha Energy to begin works on Namibia’s largest offshore diamond mines in October

    September 14, 2024892

    Chief of Staff charges National Prayer Committee to innovate for national cohesion

    June 4, 2026890

    Exceptional client service: How two Kasoa GRA officials are redefining public relations

    May 22, 2026778
    Don't Miss
    News

    COMOG mourns the demise of Dagbon Overlord, Naa Gbewaa Mahama Abukari II

    By Adnan AdamsJuly 15, 2026

    The Coalition of Muslim Organizations, Ghana (COMOG) has expressed profound sorrow following the passing of…

    HELP Foundation Africa Commends Government for Revoking E.I. 144, Restoring Achimota Forest Reserve

    July 15, 2026

    Kasoa Odikro extends heartfelt appreciation to Stephen Agyare for modernizing palace secretariat

    July 15, 2026

    Ghana Medical Infrastructure Boom: Korle Bu’s new Cardiac Lab signals lucrative openings for private capital and medical tourism

    July 15, 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Newsguide Africa is a digital news platform dedicated to providing accurate, timely, and insightful coverage of the African continent. From business and technology to lifestyle and cultural heritage, we go beyond the headlines to offer context and a positive, authentic narrative for the global African diaspora and local readers alike.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    COMOG mourns the demise of Dagbon Overlord, Naa Gbewaa Mahama Abukari II

    July 15, 2026

    HELP Foundation Africa Commends Government for Revoking E.I. 144, Restoring Achimota Forest Reserve

    July 15, 2026

    Kasoa Odikro extends heartfelt appreciation to Stephen Agyare for modernizing palace secretariat

    July 15, 2026
    Most Popular

    BREAKING: Another helicopter crashes in Kenya, Several Feared Dead

    August 7, 20251,873

    Alpha Energy to begin works on Namibia’s largest offshore diamond mines in October

    September 14, 2024892

    Chief of Staff charges National Prayer Committee to innovate for national cohesion

    June 4, 2026890

    © 2026 Newsguide Africa. All rights reserved.

    • Home
    • Science

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.