Beyond Treasury Bills: Ghana’s Test of “Real” Banking

In the chronicles of Ghana’s financial history, the past decade will be remembered as the age of “lazy banking”—a time when institutions chose the comfort of government securities over the challenge of nation-building. With Treasury bill rates soaring near 30%, banks became custodians of deposits rather than catalysts of growth. But history has turned a page. As of May 2026, the high-yield comfort zone has collapsed. The question before us is solemn and urgent: will our banks rise to the call of duty, or retreat into irrelevance?

The End of Easy Money

The Banks’ Responsibility: No More Excuses

The era of hiding behind government debt is over. To continue on that path is to betray the Ghanaian entrepreneur and undermine the nation’s future. Real banking demands:

Policy Recommendations: A Roadmap for Reform

For Entrepreneurs: Seize the Window

For Savers: Demand More

The collapse of “lazy banking” is not merely an economic shift—it is a moral reckoning. Ghana’s banks must prove they are more than passive custodians; they must become engines of growth. Entrepreneurs must rise with discipline and vision. Savers must demand transparency and impact.

Ghana does not need banks that lend only to government. Ghana needs banks that lend to Ghanaians.

The window of opportunity is open. Let this be the dawn of real banking—where institutions work as hard for the Ghanaian people as the people work for their money.

Signed:
✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭
Teshie-Nungua
akpaluck@gmail.com

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

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