Accra: The latest data from the Bank of Ghana's Collateral Registry Department has shown a significant surge in secured loans granted to female borrowers and female-owned businesses.
According to Ghana News Agency, the report highlighted a notable shift in lending dominance from foreign-owned banks to domestically-owned institutions in 2024. In the fourth quarter of 2024, secured loans granted to individual female borrowers and female-owned businesses reached 96,132, marking an 83.8 percent increase from the 52,298 loans recorded in Q4 of 2023.
This growth propelled female beneficiaries' share of total secured loans to 90.5 percent in Q4 2024, up from 85.6 percent in the same period the previous year. Similarly, loans to male borrowers and male-owned businesses rose modestly by 14.3 percent, from 8,782 in Q4 of 2023 to 10,037 in Q4 of 2024. However, their share of total secured loans dropped sharply to 9.5 percent in Q4 of 2024 from 14.4 percent in Q4 of 2023, underscoring a widening gender gap in access to secured credit.
Foreign-owned banks, which previously dominated Ghana's secured lending landscape, saw their share drop to 51.5 percent in Q4 of 2024 from 74.6 percent in Q4 of 2023. Meanwhile, domestically-owned banks more than doubled their market share, rising to 48.5 percent in Q4 of 2024 compared to 25.4 percent in the same quarter of 2023.
The Central Bank noted that the shift reflects growing competitiveness among local banks and a potential decline in foreign lenders' risk appetite or strategic focus. The surge in secured loans to women aligns with broader national efforts to promote gender-inclusive financial policies as the government plans to set up a Women Bank in the coming years.
