Healthy people are Ghana’s strongest currency, Finance Ministry says

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The Ministry of Finance has made a strong economic case for increased investment in healthcare, arguing that Ghana’s greatest national asset is not its currency or natural resources but the health and productivity of its people.

Delivering remarks on behalf of Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson at the 2026 Annual Conference of the Christian Health Association of Ghana (CHAG) in Koforidua, Technical Advisor at the Ministry of Finance, Dr. Theo Acheampong, said government now views healthcare as economic infrastructure essential to national development rather than merely a social service.

“Health is not merely a social service. Health is economic infrastructure,” Dr. Acheampong said.

He explained that investing in healthcare expands access to services, improves workforce productivity and ultimately drives economic growth.

“The strongest currency of any nation is not simply its money. It is the health, productivity and resilience of its people,” he added.

His remarks come as government rolls out the Free Primary Healthcare programme, one of its flagship health reforms aimed at expanding access to preventive healthcare services and accelerating Ghana’s progress towards Universal Health Coverage.

According to Dr. Acheampong, the programme represents a strategic investment that will reduce the long-term economic cost of disease while improving the wellbeing of the population.

He argued that the country’s healthcare financing has for years been disproportionately focused on treating illness instead of preventing it.

Citing government expenditure data, he said approximately 52 per cent of current health spending goes into curative care while only about 12 per cent is invested in preventive healthcare.

“In practical terms, for every one cedi spent on preventing illness, about four to five cedis are spent treating diseases after they occur. We believe this imbalance must change,” he said.

He noted that shifting investment towards prevention would improve health outcomes, reduce pressure on health facilities and lower future healthcare costs.

Dr. Acheampong said the Ministry of Finance fully supports the Free Primary Healthcare initiative because of its emphasis on disease prevention, health promotion and early detection.

He stressed that stronger primary healthcare systems would help keep Ghanaians healthy and economically productive while reducing avoidable hospital admissions and expensive treatments.

The Finance Ministry also reaffirmed government’s commitment to strengthening healthcare financing.

Dr. Acheampong disclosed that Parliament approved GH¢10.7 billion for the National Health Insurance Scheme this year, with GH¢6.5 billion allocated specifically for claims payments to health service providers.

He said the objective is to ensure health facilities spend more time treating patients instead of pursuing delayed reimbursements.

The Ministry also acknowledged the contribution of the Christian Health Association of Ghana to national healthcare delivery, describing the association as a strategic partner whose facilities continue to serve many rural and underserved communities where access to healthcare remains limited.

According to Dr. Acheampong, achieving Universal Health Coverage will require sustained collaboration between government, faith-based health institutions and development partners.

He said government would continue investing in primary healthcare infrastructure, health workers and innovative financing while strengthening partnerships that improve access to quality healthcare for all Ghanaians.

“The President’s vision is to build a Ghana where quality healthcare is available to every citizen regardless of income, geography or social status,” he said.

Dr. Acheampong urged stakeholders to view healthcare not simply as public expenditure but as an investment in Ghana’s long-term economic transformation, insisting that a healthy population remains the country’s most valuable resource.

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