Bank of Ghana pushes for trusted and inclusive digital assets ecosystem

Date: 2026-06-22
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By:   Nana Appiah Acquaye

The First Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Zakari Mumuni, has reaffirmed the central bank's commitment to building a trusted, inclusive, and resilient digital assets ecosystem, stressing that innovation in the sector must be guided by strong institutions and public trust rather than speculation.

Speaking at the Standard Chartered Digital Assets Summit in Accra on Friday, June 19, 2026, Dr. Mumuni outlined Ghana's strategic approach to digital assets and emerging financial technologies before an audience of regulators, financial institutions, industry leaders, and innovators.

He noted that Africa's growing digital asset economy presents significant opportunities for financial inclusion, cross-border payments, and capital market development. However, he emphasized that these opportunities must be pursued within a framework that safeguards financial stability and consumer confidence.

According to Dr. Mumuni, the Bank of Ghana has taken proactive steps to support responsible innovation by establishing a legal framework for Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) under Act 1154. He added that the central bank has strengthened cooperation among regulatory institutions, created a dedicated Virtual Assets Department, and continues to leverage its Regulatory Sandbox to test innovative solutions in a controlled environment.

“The question is no longer whether digital assets will shape African finance. They already are. The real question is whether we will shape that future deliberately,” Dr. Mumuni stated.

He stressed that while digital assets and tokenisation technologies are transforming financial services globally, they should serve as tools to strengthen national financial systems rather than undermine them.

“Whatever we build, tokenise, or otherwise, we must not displace the cedi. A strong digital ecosystem should strengthen public money, not compete with it,” he said.

The First Deputy Governor further called for enhanced collaboration among regulators, financial institutions, fintech companies, and innovators across Africa to develop a secure, interoperable, and inclusive digital financial ecosystem capable of supporting the continent's long-term economic transformation.

His remarks come as Ghana continues to advance its digital finance agenda while balancing innovation with regulatory oversight, positioning itself as one of Africa's emerging leaders in digital financial services and virtual asset regulation.

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