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AFRICA
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CHINA AND INDIA
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NEW ECONOMIC FRONTIERBOX 4.3
Firms’ Perceptions of the Domestic Investment ClimateGhana. The predominant constraints that firms in Ghana face are access to credit, the cost of and access
to domestic raw materials, insufficient demand, and high inflation and interest rates. The obstacle identified as the most severe problem is access to credit this is stated as being a major problem by 50 percent of firms. As is the case for most firms in Africa,
smaller firms in Ghana were far more likely to rank access to finance as a problem in comparison to larger ones almost 70 percent of small firms identified
this as a constraint, whereas only 20 percent of larger firms perceived it as a serious problem. A large percentage of firms are reported to be either discouraged by the procedural requirements for obtaining creditor the cost of obtaining it, such as high interest rates. Following access to finance, insufficient demand is ranked second as the most severe problem by over 20 percent of the firms.
Ranked third, with 20 percent of firms identifying it as a major constraint, is the cost of domestic raw materials. When broken down by firm size,
it is reported that, while large firms find access to domestic raw materials to be a serious constraint, small firms focus on the problem of cost. This can be explained by export orientation and the different cost structure that larger firms have 10 20 30 40 utility prices uncertainty about government industrial policies taxes ownership regulations lack of skilled labor lack of Infrastructure insufficient demand inflation high interest rates high exchange rates government restictions on activities cost of imported raw materials cost of domestic raw materials competition from local firms competition from imports access to imported raw materials access to foreign exchange access to finance access to domestic raw materials
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