UK–Ghana Growth Partnership to Drive Jobs, Investment and Skills

3 Jun 2026 01:04 PM

UK–Ghana Growth Partnership (2026–2028) aims to boost jobs, trade, infrastructure and skills through major investments and private sector–led growth initiatives

The UK and Ghana have signed a new Growth Partnership aimed at delivering tangible benefits for people and businesses in Ghana, including more jobs, stronger infrastructure and better access to skills and education. The Partnership will build on the up to £215 millions of deals signed as part of the Ghana Investment Summit in London.  

Signed today during President John Dramani Mahama’s official visit to the United Kingdom, the Partnership sets out how the two countries will work together from 2026 to 2028 to support private‑sector‑led growth, boost trade and unlock new investment. 

The Partnership focuses on four priority areas: attracting private investment and finance; making it easier for Ghanaian businesses to trade; supporting infrastructure and industrial growth; and expanding skills and education partnerships. 

It is backed by a series of practical initiatives designed to deliver real results, including: 

The Partnership is signed as the UK and Ghana mark five years of the UK–Ghana Trade Partnership Agreement. Since the Agreement entered into force, bilateral trade has grown to around £1.6 billion — an increase of 12.5% since 2024. It also builds on the strong investment pipeline established by British International Investment (BII) whose development finance investment into Ghana stands at approximately £140m, including Maa Grace, a UK-Ghanaian export-focused garments business backed through Growth Investment Partners (GIP) Ghana. 

H.E Dr Christian Rogg, British High Commissioner to Ghana, said: 

This Growth Partnership is about real change people can see and feel. It means more skilled jobs, stronger ports and transport links, better access to finance, and new opportunities for young people and women across Ghana.  By working with Ghanaian partners and backing private investment, we are supporting growth that is sustainable, inclusive and led by Ghana’s own priorities.

Together, these initiatives demonstrate a strengthened UK–Ghana Growth Partnership that is:  

This partnership underscores the UK’s commitment as a long-term partner in Ghana’s economic transformation, while unlocking new commercial opportunities across priority sectors.  

Notes to editors