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It was established in Ghana by Ghana Education Trust Fund Act, 2000, Act 581. The GETFund is financed with 2.5% of the value-added tax or VAT and has to provide special financial support to public educational institutions under the Ministry of Education for development and maintenance of academic facilities.
The program is claimed to serve as a 'blueprint' for Ghana's economy recovery post COVID-19. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 8 ] According to Osei Kyei Mensah Bonsu , the Ghana CARES program 'is the boldest and biggest economic recovery program in the country's history, will enable the country to turn the challenges created by COVID-19 into opportunities for ...
The Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development is the Government of Ghana agency responsible for the promotion of government policies and projects in Ghana. [1] The ministry also promotes governance and balanced rural based development.
In view of Ghana's attempt to improve decentralization in the 1980s, the government employed the services of a Hungarian team of consultants (TESCO), sponsored by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). [3] The team was to study the nation and propose a structure of development planning based on grassroots participation. [3]
The Ghana Enterprises Agency (GEA) is a Ghanaian government agency under the Ministry of Trade and Industry. [1] [2] The GEA is mandated by the Ghana Enterprises Agency Act, 2020 (Act 1043) to promote and develop MSMEs in Ghana. [3] It replaced the National Board for Small-Scale Industries (NBSSI).
The Development Bank Ghana (DBG) is a government-owned development bank in Ghana.Owned by the government of Ghana, the institution has received grants and loans for on-lending to Ghana's commercial banks, from the African Development Bank, the World Bank Group, the European Investment Bank, and the German Development Bank. [1]
Ghana COVID-19 Private Sector Fund is an initiative by the Government of Ghana (GOG) to help fight the novel corona virus pandemic. The fund was established by ten businessmen and women to raise GHC 100,000 to support the effort of the government by providing intervention to support the public who have been hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic in Ghana either economically, socially and politically.
The COVID-19 National Trust Fund was established by an act of Parliament (Act 1013) [1] to mobilize funds to be used in complementing the government's efforts to address the COVID-19 pandemic in Ghana. [2] It is managed by a 7-member board of trustees chaired by the former Chief Justice Sophia Akuffo