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Ghana Exports Promotion Authority is a state organization with the mandate to develop, facilitate and promote Ghanaian exports. The Head Office of Ghana Export Promotion Authority housed in the Africa Trade House.
The service is mandated to collect Import and export duty tax, petroleum tax and import excise. It promotes the protection of revenue through the prevention of smuggling of goods across Ghana's borders. The service protects the boundaries of Ghana by preventing external aggression and promotes territorial integrity of Ghana.
Ghana's increasing oil exports as a percentage of all exports. Ghana has 5 billion barrels (790 × 10 ^ 6 m 3) to 7 billion barrels (1.1 × 10 ^ 9 m 3) of petroleum in reserves. A large oilfield which contains up to 3 billion barrels (480 × 10 ^ 6 m 3) of sweet crude oil was discovered in 2007. [58]
This is the list of countries by trade-to-GDP ratio, i.e. the sum of exports and imports of goods and services, divided by gross domestic product, expressed as a percentage, based on the data published by World Bank. The list includes sovereign states and self-governing dependent territories based upon the ISO standard ISO 3166-1.
This comprehensive dataset encompasses exports and imports categorized by both country of origin and destination, with products detailed according to the Standard International Trade Classification at the four-digit level (SITC-4) and the Harmonized System at the four-digit level (HS-4). Spanning from 1962 to 2022, the OEC offers datasets ...
As production and official exports collapsed, revenue necessary for the survival of the economy was obtained through the procurement of further loans, thereby intensifying a self-destructive cycle driven by debt and reliance on vulnerable world commodity markets. [1] By the early 1980s, Ghana's economy was in an advanced state of collapse. [1]
On the initial signing of the OGP commitment by the embassy of Ghana in the US in September 2011, NITA intensified its discussions with the WF on developing a national plan to create an open data portal where government could make its data available in a format that civil society organizations (CSOs), the developer community, academia, the ...
In 1991 the government established an office to deal with industrial distress in response to complaints that "unrestrained imports" of foreign products were undermining local enterprises. The 1992 budget included assistance for local industrialists; ¢2 billion was set aside as financial support for "deserving enterprises." [3]