From Debt Restructuring to Cocoa Bonds: Can Ghana Turn the Tide? – Hasford Judge Quartey writes

Engr. Hasford Judge Quartey
By Engr. Hasford Judge Quartey
When Ghana’s Ministry of Finance announced on 18 February 2026 that it had paid GH¢10 billion in interest under the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP), it was more than a routine fiscal update. In a market that has spent the last few years learning the hard lesson of caution, the payment served as a clear signal of intent.
For banks, pension funds, and asset managers, the DDEP era was defined by restructuring, forced maturity extensions, and a profound test of trust. In that climate, a full cash coupon payment, now the sixth under the programme, carries psychological weight far beyond its headline value. It suggests a government not merely stabilising its books, but steadily rebuilding credibility.
That credibility is the essential foundation for a policy idea now gaining traction: domestic cocoa bonds.
For over three decades, the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) has relied on offshore syndicated loans to finance annual crop purchases. While the model provided reliable access to foreign currency, it also tethered cocoa financing to global credit conditions and exchange rate volatility. Each time the cedi weakens or international markets tighten, the cost of funding Ghana’s most important export rises.
A domestically issued cocoa bond would represent a decisive strategic shift in Ghana’s financing approach. By anchoring commodity financing within the local capital market, policymakers aim to reduce currency risk while offering institutional investors a credible, asset-linked alternative to conventional government paper.
The timing is significant. The GH¢10 billion DDEP interest payment has injected fresh liquidity into the financial system. Institutions that received coupon payments now hold capital that must be redeployed. A well-structured cocoa bond could offer a natural avenue for that liquidity recycling.
Yet the shadow of the debt exchange still lingers. Investors will not forget their restructuring experience overnight. Any new instrument associated with government risk will face rigorous scrutiny.
Success will depend almost entirely on structure.
If the cocoa bond is perceived as sovereign debt under a different label, investor appetite will be limited. To gain confidence, cocoa export proceeds must be strictly ring-fenced. Cash flows should move through independent escrow arrangements or trustee oversight, with debt servicing prioritised before transfers to the consolidated fund. Investors will demand protection mechanisms, not assurances.
If designed with these safeguards, a domestic cocoa bond could mark a meaningful transition — from crisis management toward more productive, self-sustaining financing. The GH¢10 billion payment does not guarantee that outcome. But it has improved the atmosphere and strengthened the credibility needed to attempt it.
In public finance, trust is the most valuable currency. This week, Ghana invested in rebuilding it.


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