Ghana’s rural banking sector has grown into a GH¢26 billion industry, with 147 licensed institutions serving more than 8 million customers as of May 2026, Bank of Ghana Governor Dr Johnson Asiama has announced.
Dr Asiama said the growth reflected the success of the country’s rural banking model, which was introduced 50 years ago to bring formal financial services closer to underserved communities.
“What began with one bank at Nyakrom is today 147 licensed institutions, about 1,000 branches, more than 8 million customers, and an asset base of approximately GH¢26 billion as of May this year,” the Governor said.
He was speaking at an event to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Ghana’s Rural Banking Programme on Thursday, July 16, 2026.
According to him, the figures represented more than institutional growth, describing them as evidence that the original vision behind rural banking had delivered results.
“They are not a measure of institutional success. They are a verdict on the original idea,” Dr Asiama said.
The Governor traced the origins of the programme to 1976 when the Nyakrom Rural Bank in the Central Region became the first community-owned bank established in Ghana.
He said the initiative was created because traditional banking structures did not adequately serve farmers, traders, and residents in rural communities.
“People saved. People borrowed. People built. They simply did it without a bank because there was no appropriate bank for them to do it with,” he said.
Dr Asiama noted that rural banks had since played an important role in financing agriculture, supporting small businesses, mobilising savings, and connecting communities to the formal financial system.
He, however, acknowledged that the sector had faced challenges, including governance weaknesses and institutional failures, which affected public confidence in some communities.
“When one failed, the loss was not recorded in a supervisory return and forgotten. It was recorded in a community, in its savings, in its confidence, and in the faith it had placed in an institution carrying its own name,” he said.
The Bank of Ghana Governor said ongoing reforms were aimed at strengthening the sector while preserving its original purpose of financial inclusion.
The reforms include transitioning rural banks into community banks and expanding the model beyond rural areas to allow community banking in urban centres.
Dr Asiama said the future of community banking would depend on maintaining trust, accountability, participation, and local development.
“These are the values that must carry it again for the next 50 years,” he said.