Ghana is steadily strengthening its position as one of West Africa’s more investable economies, according to the latest World Bank Business Ready (B-READY) evaluationGhana is steadily strengthening its position as one of West Africa’s more investable economies, according to the latest World Bank Business Ready (B-READY) evaluation

Ghana’s Business Readiness Improves in World Bank B-READY Ranking

3 min read

Ghana is steadily strengthening its position as one of West Africa’s more investable economies, according to the latest World Bank Business Ready (B-READY) evaluation, which measures how effectively countries support private sector activity. The country scored as high as 72 percent in financial services, while lagging in market competition, where results fell to 34 percent.

The divergence highlights both Ghana’s reform momentum and the structural bottlenecks that still constrain enterprise growth.

Financial services lead the gains

Ghana’s strongest performance came in financial services and labour frameworks, two areas that directly affect business formation and expansion. Improvements in access to credit, regulatory clarity, and digital financial infrastructure have helped reduce transaction costs for firms and households alike.

A more resilient banking sector, combined with the rapid uptake of mobile money and fintech solutions, has expanded formal financial inclusion. For investors, this matters. Efficient financial systems tend to lower capital costs, improve liquidity and support small- and medium-sized enterprises — the backbone of most African economies.

Labour frameworks show regional leadership

On labour indicators, Ghana ranked among the top performers in the region. Clearer hiring rules, compliance standards and workforce protections create a more predictable environment for employers. At the same time, they reduce legal uncertainty for foreign firms entering the market.

This balance between flexibility and protection often correlates with higher productivity and lower operational risk — key considerations for manufacturers and service providers evaluating new locations.

Yet the B-READY scores also reveal persistent structural constraints. Market competition, where Ghana scored only 34 percent, remains a weak spot. Barriers to entry, concentrated sectors and uneven enforcement of competition rules can limit innovation and discourage new investment.

Without stronger competition frameworks, the benefits of financial and labour reforms may not fully translate into faster firm creation or broader productivity gains.

What it means for investors

For policymakers, the message is clear: Ghana has built a stronger institutional base but must deepen reforms to unlock the next stage of growth. For investors, the outlook is cautiously positive. The country’s improving financial architecture and regulatory clarity signal a maturing business climate, even as competition policy remains a work in progress.

If Ghana sustains its reform trajectory, the gap between high-performing sectors and lagging areas could narrow, reinforcing its role as a gateway economy in West Africa.

The post Ghana’s Business Readiness Improves in World Bank B-READY Ranking appeared first on FurtherAfrica.

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