Ghana Minute.
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Ghana’s news, on the hour · Est. 2026
Thursday, 18 June 2026
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Ghanaian press · Organization

African Development Bank

Also known as: AfDB · African Development Bank Group

Multilateral development finance institution that funds programmes and projects in Ghana, including employment initiatives and agricultural compacts, and publishes economic outlooks.

2026-04-272026-06-18

In coverage

Verbatim sentences from the source article.

  1. June 2026
  2. Joy Online

    In South Africa, nearly 73% of citizens now express distrust toward African immigrants, even as the country accounts for over 40% of all intra African trade. “At a time when the AU, AfCFTA, Afreximbank, the African Development Bank, and the Africa Monologue Challenge are working

    ACCP raises alarm over rising xenophobia in South Africa, calls for intervention of AU and AfCFTA
  3. May 2026
  4. Business & Financial Times

    On the morning of 25th May 2026, a day for the annual commemoration of the foundation of the Organisation of African Unity, now the African Union, I found myself in Brazzaville, the Republic of Congo, participating in the African Development Bank Meetings.

    Reflecting on africa day 2026: Are we achieving true liberation?
  5. Daily Guide

    Further compression would put the government in breach of its development obligations, jeopardise World Bank and AfDB project disbursements, and likely trigger public unrest.

    Ghana’s Tax Gap: New Levies Loom In Mid-Year Budget
  6. Joy Online

    Mr Nyarko Ampem cited data from the African Development Bank (AfDB), which estimated that the continent faced an annual infrastructure financing gap of between US$68 billion and US$108 billion, saying this presented an opportunity for liquidity management as well as national and

    Africa must become a destination for investment, not aid — Deputy Finance Minister
  7. The Ghanaian Times

    He disclosed that ECREEE, with support from the African Development Bank, was preparing a broader regional programme aimed at strengthening renewable energy training centres and supporting certification examinations across member countries.

    Experts converge on Akuse for mini-grid training initiative
  8. The Ghanaian Times

    In Zambia, efforts under Mission 300 are supporting access to electricity, with more than 44 million people already connected through projects led by the World Bank and the African Development Bank.

    Rockefeller Foundation shifts focus to African-led development
  9. Business & Financial Times

    Africa’s infrastructure deficit, according to the African Development Bank, exceeds $100bn annually.

    The Inconvenient Truth with Ing. Prof. Douglas Boateng: Africa will not escape the IMF through austerity alone, but through value for money discipline
  10. The Chronicle

    Through Mission 300 – an initiative aimed at connecting 300 million Africans to electricity by 2030 – more than 44 million people have already gained access to power through projects led by the World Bank and the African Development Bank.

    Rockefeller Foundation mobilises $3bn for investment in Africa
  11. Joy Online

    According to the Foundation, well over 44 million people have already gained access to electricity through projects supported by the World Bank and the African Development Bank.

    Rockefeller Foundation awards over US$350m, reaching 731 million people amid global aid decline
  12. Joy Online

    The African Development Bank estimates that Africa’s infrastructure financing gap remains between 68 billion and 108 billion dollars annually.

    What is wrong with us? We celebrate buildings but neglect the systems that keep cities alive

Monday 15 June

  1. Anti-immigrant violence undermines South Africa's economic recovery

    An opinion article argues that anti-immigrant violence in South Africa, driven by beliefs that foreign nationals displace local workers, threatens the informal traders, migrant entrepreneurs and township supply chains that sustain the country's economy.

    15 June 2026 · Joy Online

Wednesday 10 June

  1. Ghana launches women and youth employment programme for 30,000 jobs

    Ghana has officially launched the Ghana Women and Youth Employment and Social Cohesion (GWYESCO) Programme, funded by the African Development Bank, to create more than 30,000 jobs and economic opportunities for women and young people across the country.

    10 June 2026 · Joy Online

  2. Ghana launches women and youth employment programme for 30,000 jobs

    Ghana has officially launched the Ghana Women and Youth Employment and Social Cohesion (GWYESCO) Programme, funded by the African Development Bank, aimed at creating more than 30,000 jobs and economic opportunities for women and young people. The initiative, implemented through the Social Investment Fund, seeks to address youth unemployment, promote women's economic empowerment, and strengthen social cohesion in vulnerable communities.

    10 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

  3. AfDB pegs Ghana unemployment at 13.1%, inequality at 43.5%

    The African Development Bank reports in its Economic Outlook 2026 that unemployment and inequality remain high in Ghana, with joblessness disproportionately affecting women at 14.8% and youth at 32%, signaling non-inclusive growth.

    10 June 2026 · Joy Online

  4. AfDB pegs Ghana's unemployment at 13.1%, inequality at 43.5%

    The African Development Bank's 2026 Economic Outlook reports that Ghana's unemployment stands at 13.1% and inequality at 43.5%, with unemployment disproportionately affecting women (14.8%) and youth (32%). The medium-term outlook remains positive, with inflation expected to decline to single digits and fiscal deficit projected to remain broadly within target.

    10 June 2026 · Joy Online

  5. AfDB projects Ghana 5.0% GDP growth in 2026, highlights financing gap

    The African Development Bank projects Ghana will grow at 5.0% in 2026 and 5.4% in 2027, down from an estimated 5.8% in 2025, but warns the country faces an investment financing gap of about 9% of GDP due to high public debt and low domestic revenue.

    10 June 2026 · Joy Online

  6. AfDB projects Ghana's GDP growth at 5.0% in 2026, flags financing gap

    The African Development Bank projects Ghana's GDP growth at 5.0% in 2026 and 5.4% in 2027, supported by improved confidence and macroeconomic management, but warns the country faces an estimated investment financing gap of about 9% of GDP due to high public debt and low domestic revenue.

    10 June 2026 · Joy Online

Tuesday 9 June

  1. Ghana launches $3.5bn AgriConnect agriculture programme to 2030

    The government has launched the Ghana AgriConnect Compact, a major agricultural transformation programme expected to improve food security for nearly three million people and create more than 2.6 million jobs by 2035, requiring an estimated $3.5 billion for its first phase from 2026 to 2030.

    9 June 2026 · The Ghanaian Times

Monday 8 June

  1. West Africa mobilizes investment to boost rice self-sufficiency

    West African leaders and partners at an investment roundtable in Ghana called for increased regional investment in rice production to improve food security, reduce imports, and create jobs, with a target of achieving rice self-sufficiency by 2035. The roundtable identified investment opportunities across the rice value chain including irrigation, seed systems, machinery, milling, and storage.

    8 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

  2. AI and automation: don't lose business soul to speed

    Bernard Kelvin Clive argues that while AI and automation tools help businesses move faster and innovate, business owners risk building fast companies that cannot last if they automate everything without developing people who understand the business's roots, values, and culture. Legacy, he contends, runs through people, not systems.

    8 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

  3. Ghana's 111-hospital pledge faces delays and funding shortfalls

    Four years into Agenda 111, Ghana's promise of 111 fully equipped district hospitals remains unfulfilled, with incomplete buildings in communities like Kpandai unable to serve patients and a USD 1.7 billion budget falling short of actual health sector capital needs.

    8 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

  4. Ghana needs CEO-Government compact for economic transformation

    An opinion piece argues that Ghana's restored macroeconomic stability—including Cedi appreciation, 3.3% inflation, 6% GDP growth, and 45.3% debt-to-GDP ratio in 2025—creates the foundation for a structured partnership between government and business to drive economic transformation.

    8 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

Sunday 7 June

  1. Ghana's SMEs struggle with information gaps on funding sources

    Small and Medium Enterprises in Ghana face a critical barrier beyond capital shortage: lack of information about available grants, loans, accelerator programmes, and investment facilities launched by governments, development finance institutions, and private investors. Many entrepreneurs spend considerable effort navigating a fragmented funding landscape to identify opportunities relevant to their businesses.

    7 June 2026 · Joy Online

  2. Ghana launches AgriConnect Compact for food security and jobs

    Ghana, with World Bank and development partner support, has launched the AgriConnect Compact, a national framework to strengthen food security, create jobs, reduce food imports, and mobilize investment across priority agricultural value chains including cocoa, oil palm, rice, maize, and poultry. In its first phase (2026–2030), the Compact aims to improve food and nutrition security for an estimated 2.99 million people and support the creation of more than 2.6 million jobs by 2035, requiring estimated financing of about US$3.5 billion.

    7 June 2026 · Joy Online

Thursday 4 June

  1. Kuwait Fund finances African infrastructure as development partner

    The Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED), founded in 1961, has become a major financier of African development projects beyond the Arab world, providing concessional loans, grants, and technical assistance with a focus on long-term infrastructure and economic growth rather than immediate commercial returns.

    4 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

  2. PPPs critical for Ghana's sports infrastructure development

    President Mahama's government aims to develop world-class sports infrastructure amid fiscal constraints and rising public debt. Morocco's structured PPPs offer lessons for Ghana in building a sustainable, commercially viable sports ecosystem through partnerships rather than government-led delivery alone.

    4 June 2026 · Business & Financial Times

Tuesday 2 June

  1. ECOWAS targets rice self-sufficiency by 2035

    ECOWAS aims to achieve regional rice self-sufficiency by 2035 and is urging governments, investors and development partners to accelerate financing. The region currently produces only 61 percent of the rice it consumes, with supply gaps widening despite a 44 percent increase in rice output between 2008 and 2024.

    2 June 2026 · Joy Online

  2. Government links rice import permits to local farm investment

    Ghana's government announced a new policy requiring rice importers to demonstrate verifiable partnerships with local rice producers before receiving import permits, aiming to accelerate progress toward self-sufficiency and reduce the import bill.

    2 June 2026 · Joy Online

  3. AfDB invests $125 million to boost Africa guarantee platform

    The African Development Bank will inject $125 million into the African Trade and Investment Development Insurance agency to become its largest shareholder, aiming to increase annual guarantees to $10 billion and unlock private capital for African development as official development aid declines.

    2 June 2026 · Joy Online

Monday 1 June

  1. Africa's preference for employment over entrepreneurship limits development

    A Joy Online opinion piece argues that millions of Africans prioritize securing jobs over creating businesses and employment, and that this cultural emphasis on salaries rather than wealth creation represents a significant overlooked development challenge across the continent.

    1 June 2026 · Joy Online

  2. ACCP urges AU, AfCFTA intervention over South Africa xenophobia

    The African Chamber of Content Producers has called for African Union and AfCFTA intervention to address xenophobic attacks on African nationals in South Africa, saying the situation has prompted Ghana to evacuate approximately 300 of its nationals and risks damaging intra-African trade, tourism, and unity.

    1 June 2026 · Joy Online

Saturday 30 May

  1. Africa Day 2026: reflections on liberation and continental progress

    An opinion piece reflecting on Africa Day 2026, noting the author's participation in the Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi and the African Development Bank Meetings in Brazzaville, where President Denis Sassou-Nguesso announced that the Republic of the Congo would waive visa requirements for all African nationals beginning in 2027.

    30 May 2026 · Business & Financial Times

Friday 29 May

  1. Ghana's revenue base insufficient to cover spending in 2026

    Ghana's government is spending faster than it is collecting revenue, with cumulative total revenue and grants reaching only 3.6% of GDP and tax revenue at 3.0% of GDP by end of March 2026, against total government expenditure of 3.9% of GDP, making new taxes in the mid-year budget likely.

    29 May 2026 · Daily Guide

Sunday 24 May

  1. Africa should attract investment instead of aid, finance minister says

    Ghana's Deputy Finance Minister Thomas Nyarko Ampem called on African leaders to position the continent as an investment destination rather than an aid recipient, advocating for deeper financial market integration, innovative financing structures, and African capital to fund continental development.

    24 May 2026 · Joy Online

Wednesday 20 May

  1. West African experts train on mini-grid design and installation

    Renewable energy experts from West Africa gathered in Akuse for a seven-day Training-of-Trainers programme hosted by the VRA Academy in collaboration with ECREEE and Takoradi Technical University, aimed at strengthening technical capacity in clean mini-grid design, installation and inspection across the sub-region.

    20 May 2026 · The Ghanaian Times

  2. Rockefeller Foundation shifts to African-led development initiatives

    The Rockefeller Foundation's 2025 impact report shows a shift from donor dependency to African-led solutions, with the foundation awarding more than US$350 million in grants and committing $133 million across 66 opportunities in Africa. The report highlights partnerships addressing disease prevention, food insecurity, and energy access, including West African laboratory systems that have detected over 100 outbreaks and trained over 1,000 technicians.

    20 May 2026 · The Ghanaian Times

  3. Africa needs fiscal discipline and value-for-money spending, not austerity alone

    Prof. Douglas Boateng argues that Africa's repeated cycles of IMF intervention stem from poor spending discipline and procurement practices focused on lowest price rather than long-term value creation, not merely from debt or lack of resources.

    20 May 2026 · Business & Financial Times

  4. Rockefeller Foundation mobilises $3bn across Africa in 2025

    The Rockefeller Foundation has launched its 2025 Impact Report, detailing investments of over $350 million awarded and approximately $3 billion mobilised, with $133.2 million committed to 66 initiatives across Africa. The Foundation's work focuses on universal energy access, regenerative school meals, health systems strengthening, food security and disease prevention, including detection of over 100 disease outbreaks in West Africa through improved laboratory networks and training of over 1,000 laboratory technicians.

    20 May 2026 · The Chronicle

Tuesday 19 May

  1. Rockefeller Foundation awards $350m, reaches 731 million globally

    The Rockefeller Foundation awarded over US$350 million and mobilised US$3 billion in 2025, reaching an estimated 731 million people globally, with more than US$133 million committed across 66 opportunities in Africa. The funding supports initiatives in energy, food systems, health, and development, including a West African health partnership that has detected over 100 outbreaks and trained more than 1,000 laboratory technicians.

    19 May 2026 · Joy Online

Monday 18 May

  1. African cities build skyscrapers while neglecting underlying infrastructure

    African cities are rapidly expanding their skylines with glass towers and luxury developments, but adequate sewage, drainage, water supply, transport, waste management, and power systems have not been expanded to match. The article argues that visible urban growth means little if the infrastructure supporting it remains weak or neglected.

    18 May 2026 · Joy Online

African Development Bank — Ghanaian press coverage · Ghana Minute