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Mahama Targets Billion-Dollar Growth in Ghana–Singapore Trade

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President John Mahama delivering a speech at the Africa–Singapore Business Forum 2025.

President John Dramani Mahama has announced that trade between Ghana and Singapore surpassed US$215 million in 2024, adding that the goal is to scale up to billion-dollar levels. Speaking at the opening of the 8th Africa–Singapore Business Forum in Singapore, he positioned Ghana as a trusted entry point for investors seeking to expand across Africa.

“Ghana-Singapore trade has also grown, reaching over US$215 million in 2024,” he said, noting that Africa–Singapore trade as a whole rose by nearly 50 percent between 2020 and 2024 to almost US$14 billion, with West Africa accounting for more than half of that.

The Ghanaian leader emphasised that the growth demonstrates what stronger collaboration can achieve. “I speak today as an African leader and as President of Ghana. Our message is simple: Africa is investable, and Ghana is your reliable gateway to the continent. The continent is the world’s most dynamic emerging market.”

He described Africa as a young, expanding and digitally connected population. “We are 1.4 billion people today—young, fast-urbanising, digitally connected—and by 2030, Africa’s cities will host more than 700 million consumers. The African Continental Free Trade Area is the largest new free trade area in the world by number of countries, and this has created a $3.4 trillion market and lowered barriers across supply chains.”

Mahama highlighted Africa’s potential but pointed out funding challenges. “Africa holds vast renewable energy potential and is already a global leader in mobile money and fintech adoption. This is a market ready for scaled solutions. Yet this opportunity must be matched with capital at the right price and with the right instruments.”

As African Union Champion on Financial Institutions, he also drew attention to financing gaps. “Africa faces an annual financing gap estimated at $1.3 trillion. Infrastructure needs alone run between $181 and $221 billion per year through 2030, and the climate finance gap is about $213 billion annually. We are taking steps to build an African financial system that works for Africa; accelerate the African Monetary Institute as a precursor to the African Central Bank, and link ten major stock exchanges through the African Exchanges Linkage Project to enhance liquidity.”

Mahama pointed to Ghana’s stability and reform agenda as a foundation for investors. “As host of the African Continental Free Trade Area Secretariat, Ghana sits at the heart of the US$3.4 trillion single market. Through ECOWAS, we connect you to more than 400 million consumers in West Africa. We offer political stability, a rules-based environment, a double taxation agreement with Singapore in force since 2019, and a growing base of Singaporean investors—69 companies registered with cumulative investments exceeding US$2 billion. Ghana is, therefore, a trusted entry point to scale across the continent.”

He detailed Ghana’s ongoing reforms, noting easing inflation, a stabilised cedi, and improving ratings outlooks. “We are pursuing a deliberate national reset: stabilising the macroeconomy, restoring confidence and reforming how we do business. Inflation is easing, the cedi has stabilised, and ratings outlooks are improving. We are simplifying regulations through our Business Regulatory Reforms, and we are reviewing our Investment Promotion Act—including the removal of minimum capital thresholds for foreign investors—to make it easier and faster to partner, whether through joint ventures or wholly-owned investments.”

Mahama also presented Ghana’s 24-Hour Economy as a bold model for productivity and exports. “Our economic strategy is anchored in productivity, exports and jobs. We call it the 24-Hour Economy—for a reason. Ghana is OPEN FOR BUSINESS 24 hours a day.”

He explained that the Volta Economic Corridor forms the core of this new model. “We are aligning infrastructure, incentives, and skills so factories, farms, ports, and service centres can operate round-the-clock shifts safely and competitively. At the core of this is the Volta Economic Corridor—our most ambitious integrated development to date. Grow24: irrigating more than two million hectares for year-round farming. Make24: agro-industrial parks for textiles, pharmaceuticals and food processing. Show24: tourism and hospitality along one of the world’s great inland lakes. Connect24: transforming Lake Volta into a cost-efficient inland transport spine, reducing logistics costs and linking farms, factories and markets.”

Mahama added that projects such as the Legon Pharmaceutical Innovation Park, Kumasi Machinery and Technology Park, Akosombo-Juapong Garments and Textiles Park, Digital TVET Centres of Excellence, and renewable energy corridors will support the strategy. “Our Big Push Infrastructure programme will accelerate roads, power and digital connectivity to crowd-in private capital and unlock scale.”

The President concluded with a direct invitation to investors. “On day three of this State Visit, as part of the Africa Forum, we will host a Presidential Business Roundtable. Join us. Bring your teams. Put Ghana’s readiness to the test. We will showcase bankable projects, provide direct access to our regulators, outline incentives for strategic investors and offer a one-stop investor concierge so decisions can be made quickly and confidently.”

He closed by positioning Ghana as a reliable partner. “Our proposition is straightforward: a stable, reform-minded country, connected to the AfCFTA, designed for scale; a 24-Hour Economy that matches your need for speed, reliability and standards; a pipeline of investable projects in agribusiness, logistics, manufacturing, energy, digital and tourism; a partner that values integrity, predictability and long-term relationships.”

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