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State-Owned Enterprises Record GHS133.7bn Revenue Amid Growing Losses – Report

State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) recorded strong revenue growth in the 2024 financial year, with total earnings climbing 28.3 percent to GHS133.68 billion, up from GHS104.19 billion in 2023.

The performance, according to 2024 State Ownership Report was largely driven by robust expansion in the Energy sub-sector, which posted 38.98 per cent growth, and Financial & Allied Services, which surged by 49.52 per cent.

The sector also showed signs of operational recovery, with profit before interest and tax (PBIT) improving sharply to GHS1.57 billion in 2024, compared with GHS376.93 million in 2023 and a loss of GHS9.62 billion in 2022.

However, mounting finance costs weighed heavily on the bottom line.

The SOE sector ended 2024 with a net loss of GHS9.67 billion, wider than the GHS7.14 billion shortfall recorded in 2023. Excessive finance charges, totalling GHS9.39 billion, wiped out all operational gains.

On the balance sheet side, total SOE assets expanded by 22.52 per cent to GHS395.20 billion, with ECG, VRA, and GNPC leading contributions. Liabilities, however, rose faster at 24.20 per cent to GHS281.94 billion, with the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) alone accounting for GHS71 billion.

Despite persistent losses from entities such as Ghana Cylinder Manufacturing Company, GNPA, Ghana Water Company Limited, Graphic Communications Group, and Tema Oil Refinery, nine SOEs—including the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA), Bui Power Authority (BPA), Ghana National Gas Company (GNGC), and BOST—maintained consistent profitability over the past five years.

In a positive development, three SOEs—Ghana Reinsurance Company, TDC Company, and State Housing Company—paid a combined dividend of GHS29.36 million to the government in 2024, representing a 78.9 percent increase from the previous year. Notably, the State Housing Company paid dividends for the first time in three decades.

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