Ghana’s battle against corruption continues to face significant challenges, as the Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition’s (GACC) State of Corruption Report 2024 reveals that over GH¢9 billion in public funds was lost to financial irregularities in 2023 alone.
Despite numerous anti-corruption initiatives, the report exposes a disturbing trend of systemic weaknesses across Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs), and state-owned corporations.
The GACC report draws heavily on data from the Auditor-General’s latest audit reports, which outline various categories of financial infractions including cash, payroll, procurement, stores, contract, and tax irregularities. The cumulative cost of these infractions, according to the report, was a staggering GH¢9,064,477,240 — resources that could have been directed toward essential social services such as education, healthcare, and infrastructure development.
Of this amount, irregularities in public boards and corporations alone accounted for GH¢8.8 billion. While this marked a marginal decrease compared to the previous year, the report warns that this reduction offers little consolation, as two categories — procurement and contract irregularities — saw alarming increases. These areas are particularly vulnerable to inflated pricing, sole sourcing, and poor contract execution, practices that significantly weaken public trust.
For MDAs, the cost of financial irregularities increased from GH¢165 million in 2022 to GH¢243 million in 2023 — a shocking 47% rise. The GACC highlights that most of this increase was driven by cash and contract infractions, again pointing to weak internal controls, inadequate oversight, and possibly complicity by public officials.
MMDAs did not escape scrutiny either. Although the financial loss at this level (GH¢22 million) appears modest in comparison, the report emphasizes that the 10% increase in irregularities in just one year is troubling. Cash irregularities, in particular, rose sharply, raising questions about the effectiveness of financial administration at the local government level.
“The overarching concern,” the report warns, “is that none of our state institutions currently have administrative systems strong enough to consistently prevent financial leakages.”
The report recommends urgent reforms across public institutions, including strengthening internal audit systems, enforcing sanctions against non-compliance, and increasing support for investigative bodies. It also stresses the need for a fully independent and well-resourced Auditor-General’s Office, whose recommendations must be backed by legal enforcement and political will.
Experts argue that unless decisive action is taken, the cost of corruption will continue to erode the country’s development agenda. Dr. Kojo Mensah, a governance analyst, noted, “It is not enough to simply identify these irregularities year after year. We need prosecutions, recoveries, and a complete overhaul of how public funds are managed.”
The GACC also links these financial infractions to Ghana’s stagnant performance on global corruption indices. Ghana scored 42 out of 100 on Transparency International’s 2024 Corruption Perception Index (CPI), ranking 80th out of 180 countries. This score has remained virtually unchanged over the last five years, signaling stagnation in anti-corruption efforts despite public outcry.
The GACC warns that without swift and sustained action, Ghana risks backsliding further on both governance and economic development indicators.