“Has GoldBod made a loss? Emphatically no” – Sammy Gyamfi declares 

0
1068
Sammy Gyamfi CEO of GoldBod

The Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod), Sammy Gyamfi, has debunked claims that the GoldBod made losses under the Gold-for-Reserves programme.

According to Sammy Gyamfi, the GoldBod ended 2025 with a strong financial surplus.

Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile on Saturday, January 3, Mr Gyamfi explained, “Has GoldBod made a loss? Emphatically no. The GoldBod, even though it is not a profit-making public operation, has not made any losses. The GoldBod for the year 2025 generated revenue to the tune of GHS960 million, a little over that. Our expenditure for the year 2025 stands below GHS120 million. These are all unaudited accounts.”

“…It is very clear that we will be declaring a surplus of GHS700, GHS800million to put it very conservatively.”

His comments follow, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which has raised concerns over the reported losses of Goldbod.

The IMF described them as a potential risk to Ghana’s macroeconomic stability.

They further attributed the losses to transactions involving artisanal and small-scale mining, dore gold and referenced alleged “GoldBod off-taker fees.”

Also, the Minority in Parliament, led by Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, Member of Parliament for Ofoase Ayirebi, is demanding a bipartisan parliamentary probe into BoG-GoldBod $214m loss.

Addressing journalists in Accra on Monday, December 29, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah called for a bipartisan investigation into the operation of Goldbod.

He stated that a parliamentary ad-hoc committee should conduct a bipartisan investigation into all contracts, licenses, intermediaries, and related entities of the Goldbod.

He further noted that Ghana has lost $214 million, heading to $300million under the Bank of Ghana and the Ghana Gold Board and urged the committee to call on the two institutions to disclose their fee structures, pricing formulas, aggregator selection criteria, and foreign exchange arrangements.

Speaking to journalists in Accra, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah stated, “We are demanding the following: a bipartisan parliamentary inquiry into the circumstances under which the Republic of Ghana has lost $214 million, heading to $300million, to be done here by the parliament of Ghana. We are asking for a parliamentary ad hoc investigative committee with the power to subpoena all contracts, licences, intermediaries, including this power rock monopoly.

“Under this bipartisan enquiry, we will be expecting the BoG and the GoldBod to publish the fee structure, the pricing formula, the aggregator selecting criteria and all foreign exchange arrangements that they have tied to this scheme, which has led to this loss.

“…One of the things we will be asking for is the suspension of permits in forest reserves and the introduction of serious measures on traceability because, as at now, we have every reason to believe that state money is being used to buy Galamsey gold…Where negligence or corruption is proven, prosecutions must follow, and all recoverable funds must be given back to the state,” Nkrumah stated.

Watch the video below: