Ghana’s gold sector is celebrating an unprecedented milestone, with April 2025 exports hitting a staggering 897.6 million, the highest in over two years.
This historic surge, announced by the Ghana GoldBoard (GoldBod), comes just weeks after the government allocated a $279 million revolving fund to support small-scale miners. But beneath the euphoria lies a troubling question: How does a $279 million fund generate nearly 900 million in exports in just one month?
A statistical miracle or creative accounting?
According to Prof. Isaac Boadi, Dean, Faculty of Accounting and Finance, UPSA and Executive Director, IERPP, the numbers defy simple logic. April’s gold exports was 9,295 kilograms (9.295 tonnes) which represents an 80% surge compared to earlier months, where earnings averaged around $500 million. At 96,560 per kilogram, Ghana’s gold is fetching a premium, but even at this rate, the math doesn’t add up.
The government’s $279 million revolving fund was meant to purchase 3 tonnes per week (12 tonnes/month) from small−scale miners. Yet, April’s exports fell shortly at 9.295 tonnes, leaving 2.7 tonnes unaccounted for. Worse, if GoldBod spent the entire fund buying gold at market rates, it should have exported only $289.7 million worth, not $897.6 million.
Where Did the Extra $600M Come From?
Three possibilities emerge:
Large-scale miners dominated exports – If the $897.6 million includes major mining firms, then the revolving fund’s impact is overstated.
Private sector boosted sales – GoldBod may have blended its purchases with private gold exports, inflating the figures.
Exchange rate manipulation? – A sharply depreciated cedi could artificially inflate dollar earnings, masking stagnant production.
A revolving fund is supposed to recycle money: buy gold, sell it, and reuse the proceeds. But if $279 million magically turns into $897.6 million, either Ghana has discovered financial Magic or the numbers are misleading.
Example:
Fund Capacity: 279 million buys 2.9 tonnes at 96,560/kg.
April’s Reality: 9.295 tonnes were exported, requiring $897.6 million in purchases, triple the fund’s size.
The fund alone cannot explain the export boom.
Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson hailed the revolving fund as a game-changer. But unless the government clarifies:
Who really contributed to the $897.6 million?
Why is the export volume below the promised 12 tonnes?
Is the revolving fund already depleted?
…the so-called “historic” gold boom risks being exposed as a statistical illusion.
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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.