Economy

Displaying 1705 - 1710 of 2858

 

THE BANK: Société Générale Ghana, a strong local bank, is one of the leading financial institutions in Ghana. It operates 37 fully networked branches, agencies and outlets across the country and serves a wide range of corporate customers, individuals and small and medium-sized enterprises.

 

THE BANK: Standard Chartered Bank Ghana has been in operation since 1896 when it was known as the Bank of British West Africa. After Ghana’s independence, the bank’s name was changed to Bank of West Africa Limited and upon a merger with Standard Bank in 1969, the name was changed to Standard Bank of...

 

THE COMPANY: Total Petroleum Ghana was incorporated in Ghana on December 31, 1951 as Socony-Vacuum Oil Company (Gold Coast Limited). It was at that point a wholly-owned subsidiary of Socony-Vacuum Oil of the US. The name of the Ghanaian subsidiary was changed from Mobil Oil Gold Coast to Mobil Oil...

 

High expectations for the impact of pension reforms on the performance of equity markets and bonds have been deflated after the funding issues and technical glitches slowed the flow of investments from the second tier of the revised pension system. Hundreds of millions of cedis had been expected to be invested annually as 5% of wages were...

 

The Ghanaian economy is strongly correlated to global commodities such as cocoa, gold and oil, which are the three main sources of income and foreign currency. Price swings for these three resources, increased spending on domestic public sector wages, an electricity shortage and other external factors have combined to slow the pace of...

 

The finalisation of a $918m borrowing programme through the IMF in April 2015 means Ghana’s economic trends over the short and medium terms will be predictable and structured, featuring a series of just-published targets and objectives. The government and the IMF have agreed to a three-year plan to address challenges. The process is called the...

Covid-19 Economic Impact Assessments

Stay updated on how some of the world’s most promising markets are being affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, and what actions governments and private businesses are taking to mitigate challenges and ensure their long-term growth story continues.

Register now and also receive a complimentary 2-month licence to the OBG Research Terminal.

Register Here×

Product successfully added to shopping cart