23.3 C
London
Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Online Controversy Over A Regulatory Bill Leads To Tech Community Engagement with Ghana’s Ministry of Communications

Last week, the Ghanaian technology community was in uproar over a bill that would grant sweeping powers to the National Information Technology Authority (NITA). Members of the tech community pointed out that the bill would be too restrictive and hamper the growth of the technology ecosystem.

The uproar led to an emergency meeting between the Minister of Communications, Sam George, and members of Ghana’s technology ecosystem – both virtually and physically.

In his opening remarks, the minister made a point that the document circulating online was already out of date.

The draft circulating online — the one that triggered a wave of criticism from developers, startup founders, and policy analysts — is a zero draft. A working document that was initially posted for public commentary.

The Ministry has since clarified that the proposed new legislation has not even been laid before Parliament and has already gone through some iterations over the last few months.

Narrower Than Advertised

The version of the NITA Bill currently under active consideration is not a sweeping crackdown on Ghana’s entire tech ecosystem.

According to the Minister, its scope is more targeted: the bill is intended to apply primarily to ICT professionals working within government agencies and operators of critical national infrastructure — think data centres and banking systems — not freelancers, startup founders, or software developers building consumer apps.

Ghana Minister of Communications, Sam George

The bill seeks to transform the existing National Information Technology Agency into the National Information Technology Authority, granting the institution expanded regulatory autonomy and enforcement powers across Ghana’s digital and ICT landscape.

But the certification requirements at the centre of the controversy are — in the updated draft — aimed at professionals in high-stakes, government-facing or infrastructure-critical roles. That’s a materially different regulatory ask than what critics of the zero draft have been responding to.

The most controversial section of the NITA Draft Bill had been the proposed requirement for ICT professionals to receive certification from the Authority before employment or appointment — a provision that, as written in the old draft, raised legitimate questions about freelancers, bootcamp graduates, and self-taught developers.

The updated bill, stakeholders heard, pulls back from that broad framing.

The 1% Levy Is Gone

One of the loudest flashpoints in the debate was a proposed 1% levy on the gross revenue of ICT firms.

The YAFO Institute, a policy think tank, had described the bill as “one of the most dangerous expansions of state authority over Ghana’s digital economy in recent memory,” citing the revenue levy among its core concerns.

That provision has been dropped from the current draft. Participants in the meeting confirmed it is no longer on the table — a significant concession that has not yet filtered through to much of the ongoing public debate, which continues to treat the 1% tax as live policy.

Two Processes, One Bill

The consultation timeline has also been a source of confusion. The Ministry of Communications ran its own public comment period on the earlier draft, and that window is now closed. But a parallel and currently open process is underway at Parliament, where the updated bill is now the subject of engagement.

The NITA bill is yet to be laid before Parliament

That distinction matters. Anyone tracking this issue — civil society organisations, industry associations, legal practitioners, or individual professionals with a stake in how Ghana regulates its digital economy — should be working from the updated bill, not the zero draft still indexed on government websites.

The parliamentary engagement schedule is where the action is now, and obtaining the current text is the prerequisite for meaningful participation.

Noise vs. Signal

Ghana’s tech ecosystem raised $90 million in 2025 — fragile in some ways, growing in others, and being watched carefully. The anxiety driving the NITA Bill backlash is real, and not entirely misplaced.

Across social media platforms and industry discussions, critics had argued that some provisions of the draft legislation could fundamentally change how technology businesses operate in Ghana.

NITA itself has noted that recent publications contained “serious misconceptions” regarding its legal authority and the proposed bill, and while that framing risks sounding dismissive of legitimate critique, the core point stands: the debate has outrun the actual policy.

For Ghana’s tech community, the path forward is the same one it’s always been — show up, read the bill, and engage in the process.


- Advertisement -
Latest news
- Advertisement -
Related news
- Advertisement -