Finance

Fund24 for Mahama’s 24-hour economy agenda ‘not feasible’ – Africa Policy Lens

The Africa Policy Lens (APL) has cast doubt on the feasibility of Fund24, the financial backbone of Mahama’s 24H+ economy agenda.

The Fund24, as part of Mahama’s 24H+ economy, aims to raise substantial money, and provide capital for SMEs, infrastructure projects and job creation.

However, in an an extensive review of the policy, the APL doubts the policy would meet its revenue target, stating, among other factors, that its reliance on external financial support makes it too fragile to raise the funding for the policy.

“The FUND24 was sold to Ghanaians as a bold transformation strategy, promising affordable capital for SMEs, massive infrastructure, and job creation. But behind the grand design lies a shaky Framework,” the APL said.

It continued; “Operating across three tracks, enterprise financing (via DBG and VCTF), infrastructure development (through GIIF’s SPVs), and technical assistance (offered by the 24H+ Secretariat), FUND24 aims to raise $4 billion by 2030 through blended finance and foreign institutional capital. On paper, it sounds promising. It’s structurally flawed and fundamentally incompatible with Ghana’s 24-hour economic ambitions.”

“First, let’s confront the elephant in the room: Ghana’s debt crisis. With public debt ballooning to $49.5 billion, 55% of GDP in March 2025, international development finance institutions (DFIs) are understandably cautious. In fact, in 2022, Ghana received absolutely nothing out of the $3.59 billion in infrastructure funding allocated to Sub-Saharan Africa. This is not a system that DFIs trust, and without them, FUND24’s capital flow collapses.”

‘”Add to that the cedi’s devastating 40% depreciation in 2022, and suddenly any foreign loan becomes a ticking time bomb. If DBG borrows in dollars and lends in cedis, a wave of defaults could drown the entire program.”

”Even worse, the proposal to channel Ghana’s GHS 42 billion pension fund into risky SME equity is reckless. Pension funds exist to protect retiree livelihoods, not to bankroll fragile startups. One wrong bet and the retirement security of an entire generation could vanish”, the APL added.

The APL also described the infrastructure track as “equally shaky” as well as the digital loan solution under Fund24.

“The touted Agbledu parks may never rise from the ground thanks to Ghana’s chaotic land tenure system, where over 80% of land is informally owned and legally untraceable.”

“And what of the digital loan revolution FUND24 promises? It assumes a tech-savvy population, yet only 58% of Ghanaians are even online. That’s not a digital revolution; it’s a digital delusion. You can’t run a loan portal on dreams when nearly half the population is offline or digitally excluded,” the APL further noted.

It also emphasised; “If the government truly wants a 24-hour economy, it needs a homegrown financing model, one not held hostage by foreign lenders or fictional SPVs. Ghana must unlock its own capital markets. Pension funds can play a role, yes, but through mandated low-risk allocations like South Africa’s Regulation 28.”

The APL also urged government to “issue diaspora bonds to capture part of the $4.7 billion in annual remittances”.

“…instead of chasing phantom foreign investors, it should incentivize real domestic giants, MTN, Dangote, Ghana Oil, to co-invest in SPVs. Most importantly, land reform and a push for local-currency lending must be urgent priorities if financial inclusion is to be real.”

“FUND24 is not just flawed, it is dangerous in its current form. Built on weak assumptions, overdependent on DFIs, and blind to Ghana’s on-the-ground realities, it is the most brittle pillar of the entire 24H+ economy.”

”Without urgent course correction, it will join the growing list of failed Ghanaian economic fantasies, SkyTrain, anyone?”

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Ogyem Solomon

Solomon Ogyem – Media Entrepreneur | Journalist | Brand Ambassador Solomon Ogyem is a dynamic Ghanaian journalist and media entrepreneur currently based in South Africa. With a solid foundation in journalism, Solomon is a graduate of the OTEC School of Journalism and Communication Studies in Ghana and Oxbridge Academy in South Africa. He began his career as a reporter at OTEC 102.9 MHz in Kumasi, where he honed his skills in news reporting, community storytelling, and radio broadcasting. His passion for storytelling and dedication to the media industry led him to establish Press MltiMedia Company in South Africa—a growing platform committed to authentic African narratives and multimedia journalism. Solomon is the founder and owner of Thepressradio.com, a news portal focused on delivering credible, timely, and engaging stories across Ghana and Africa. He also owns Press Global Tickets, a service-driven venture in the travel and logistics space, providing reliable ticketing services. He previously owned two notable websites—Ghanaweb.mobi and ShowbizAfrica.net—both of which contributed to entertainment and socio-political discussions within Ghana’s digital space. With a diverse background in media, digital journalism, and business, Solomon Ogyem is dedicated to telling impactful African stories, empowering youth through media, and building cross-continental media partnerships.

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