Ghana has formally stepped out of the regulatory shadows of digital finance, with Parliament positioning the country to become a governed, trusted hub for virtual assets, Open Banking, and cross-border digital transactions.
This is according to the Chair of Parliament’s Select Committee on Information and Communications,Dr. Abed-Nego Azumah Bandim, as Ghana launched its Virtual Assets Playbook at the Future of Finance Dialogues in Accra.
Speaking to regulators, fintech leaders, and industry players, the Bunkpurugu MP said the future of finance in Ghana is no longer theoretical.
“The future of finance is no longer ‘emerging’. It is already embedded in how Ghanaians save, transact, remit, borrow, and invest — often across borders, and often at a cost that makes efficiency and trust not abstract goals, but daily economic necessities,” he said.
That reality, he noted, compelled Parliament to act. In December 2025, lawmakers passed the Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP) Bill, a move Dr. Bandim described as “a clear statement of intent that brings Ghana out of the regulatory grey zone and provides the legal certainty that innovators, investors, and regulators alike have long called for.”
However, he cautioned that legislation alone will not deliver outcomes. “Legislation is only the skeleton. Regulation, implementation, and industry practice are the flesh and blood that will determine whether this framework succeeds,” he said.
Dr. Bandim stressed that Ghana’s approach to digital assets must protect monetary sovereignty, pointing to the importance of “regulated, Cedi-denominated digital instruments that keep reserves onshore, operate under Ghanaian supervision, and integrate cleanly with our banking and payments systems.”
He outlined three pillars that will determine success: policy coherence between regulators, a careful balance between innovation and consumer protection, and disciplined implementation. Sandbox licences, he explained, were deliberately included because “Parliament wants bold ideas to be tested, iterated, and refined in controlled environments.”
Calling on regulators and industry to see themselves as partners, not adversaries, Dr. Bandim said, “Regulators are not gatekeepers of the past; they are architects of the future.”
If executed well, he argued, Ghana will not simply import global digital finance models. “We will help shape them, for Africa and beyond.”
info@businessghana.com
