Gold is one of Ghana’s greatest natural resources
Listening and reading Dr Gideon Boako’s hint as an ethical indictment of monetary stewardship in Ghana, Dr Gideon Boako did not raise his voice. He did not accuse by name, nor did he indulge in populist alarm. Yet his recent remarks on the Bank of Ghana’s potential losses under the Gold-for-Reserve programme—losses projected to exceed the already acknowledged $214 million—landed with the moral force of an indictment.
In a polity accustomed to loud denials and defensive clarifications, his restraint was precisely what made the message incendiary. Numbers, when spoken plainly, can unsettle a nation more profoundly than rhetoric.
At the heart of Dr Boako’s intervention is a distinction too often blurred in public finance: the difference between a sound policy idea and a flawed execution. He was careful to exempt the GoldBod initiative itself from blame, redirecting scrutiny instead toward the Bank of Ghana’s exchange rate posture.
According to his assessment, the losses did not arise from the conceptual architecture of gold-backed reserves, but from the use of an “artificially strong cedi” in valuing transactions. This, he implied, created a distortion between accounting appearance and market reality—a gap through which public value quietly leaked.
This is where the matter transcends technical economics and enters the realm of ethics. Exchange rate policy is not a neutral instrument. It allocates burdens and benefits across society.
When a central bank chooses optimism over realism, confidence over candour, it may temporarily steady sentiment—but it also risks mispricing national assets. Gold, unlike fiat confidence, does not forgive illusion. When valued against an exchange rate that does not reflect underlying conditions, losses are not random; they are engineered by misalignment.
More troubling than the losses themselves is the institutional silence that followed. Audited accounts delayed. Public explanations rationed. Parliamentary engagement reactive rather than proactive.
In a democracy, opacity around the management of strategic national assets is not a procedural lapse—it is a moral failure. Transparency is not an administrative favour; it is a civic right. The public does not merely underwrite state policy through taxes; it entrusts its inheritance—gold, land, reserves—to custodians who are morally bound to report with clarity and timeliness.
Dr Boako’s hint, therefore, is not an opposition talking point. It is a summons to institutional humility. The Bank of Ghana occupies a sacred space in the Republic’s architecture.
It is insulated from politics precisely so it can act with discipline, prudence, and ethical restraint. That insulation, however, is not a license for opacity. Independence without accountability hardens into arrogance. Silence in the face of loss corrodes trust faster than loss itself.
What Ghana requires at this moment is not scapegoating but formal and moral correction. An honest accounting of what went wrong. A clear explanation of why exchange rate assumptions diverged from market fundamentals.
An open invitation to parliamentary scrutiny and civic review. Such gestures would not weaken the Bank; they would restore its moral authority. Institutions endure not because they are flawless, but because they are corrigible.
The original vision of the Gold-for-Reserve programme remains valid. To anchor value in domestic resources, to reduce vulnerability to forex shocks, and to reclaim a measure of monetary sovereignty—these are not misguided ambitions. But vision must submit to verification. Patriotism must not be confused with silence. To defend an idea is not to shield it from critique; it is to refine it through truth.
Gold, in Ghana, is more than a commodity. It is a memory and a promise intertwined. How it is managed speaks to who we are and what we intend to leave behind. If this moment is buried beneath technical jargon and delayed disclosures, the inheritance will be cynicism. If it is confronted with honesty and reform, the inheritance will be institutional wisdom.
Dr Boako did not accuse; he calculated. And in doing so, he reminded the Republic of a simple but enduring truth: public wealth is also moral capital. Like reserves, it must be audited. Like gold, it must be handled with reverence.
Source:
www.ghanaweb.com

