ADVERTISEMENT
Get Started
  • About Homebase Tv | Hbtvghana.com
  • Advertise
  • Broadcast Live
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Vacancies
  • Contact Us – Connect With Us
Homebase Tv - Hbtvghana.com
  • Home
  • General News
  • Business News
  • Health
  • Life & Style
  • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Parliament
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • General News
  • Business News
  • Health
  • Life & Style
  • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Parliament
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Homebase Tv - Hbtvghana.com
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Economic witch-hunting and the price of progress: Ghana’s silent betrayal of its builders – Nana Kofi Barfour writes

Mon, Nov 17 2025 12:58 PM
in Ghana General News
economic witch hunting and the price of progress ghanas silent betrayal of its builders nana kofi barfour writes
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on TelegramShare on Whatsapp
ADVERTISEMENT

Economic witch-hunting and the price of progress: Ghana’s silent betrayal of its builders – Nana Kofi Barfour writes

In an age when nations rise on the backs of visionaries, Ghana seems caught in a paradox: the celebration of mediocrity has become a value. While that is not enough, we are silently dismantling its makers.

Few stories capture this paradox better than that of Alex Apau Dadey, the Executive Chairman of KGL Group, a man whose vision, enterprise, and philanthropic spirit have reshaped parts of Ghana’s economic and social landscape, yet whose journey mirrors the silent betrayal of the very builders driving the nation forward. “In Ghana, the cost of building often exceeds the profit of dreaming.”

The Story—The Man Behind the Vision

Alex Apau Dadey is not your conventional tycoon. His story is not written in political privilege but in persistence, purpose, and patriotism. As the Executive Chairman of KGL Group, he has built one of Ghana’s most dynamic technology-driven conglomerates, touching sectors from fintech and gaming to logistics, e-commerce, and social development.

It is not his business acumen that sets him apart, but his belief that Ghana can progress on the strength of its own innovation. Under his stewardship, KGL Group has become a central player in Ghana’s digitalized economy, revolutionising systems that have enhanced transparency, accountability, and financial inclusion.

ReadAbout

Ato Forson is right: If it were easy, NPP would have done it

Learning from Gold: Why Ghana must take a stronger national stake in its lithium future

2026 budget: Blueprint for transformation or another missed opportunity

Those who know him speak of a man both visionary and vulnerable, human in his flaws, yet unwavering in his pursuit of progress. One can only say that his quiet strength lies in seeing opportunity where others see obstacles and in building solutions that serve both profit and purpose.

“For Alex Apau Dadey, enterprise is not about power; it’s about people. Not about profit, but progress.”

The Impact—Transforming Vision into Tangible Change

Under Dadey’s leadership, KGL Group has transformed itself into more than a business; it has become a national development engine.

Technology & Economic Transformation

The Group’s KGL Technology Limited has digitised key activities within the National Lottery Authority (NLA), resulting in increased efficiency, accountability, and state revenue collection. The company’s digital technologies have greatly increased government revenue from gaming operations, directing hundreds of millions of cedis into the Consolidated Fund to support public initiatives.

Beyond gaming, KGL’s investments in fintech, mobile payments, and digital distribution, through businesses such as KGL Payments and Digital Distribution Hub, have increased thousands of Ghanaians’ access to financial services.

The company’s position in modernising payment systems directly helps Ghana’s digital economy strategy, which is championed by initiatives such as Digital Ghana.

Corporate Social Responsibility & Human Development

But Mr. Dadey’s vision stretches far beyond boardrooms and servers. Through the KGL Foundation, he has redefined corporate social responsibility as a moral and national duty. In education, KGL funds scholarships for brilliant but underprivileged students, builds ICT centers, and supports school feeding initiatives while partnering with hospitals and NGOs to improve maternal and child healthcare through the group’s foundation, especially in rural communities in health.

In sports, KGL is a major sponsor of the Ghana Football Association (GFA) and grassroots sporting activities, ensuring the next generation of athletes have both opportunity and hope.

These interventions align directly with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), promoting education, health, employment, and innovation. Under Dadey’s leadership, KGL is not only generating revenue but also building social infrastructure for Ghana’s future. “He builds in silence, gives without cameras, and transforms without applause.”

The Challenges—When Vision Meets Resistance

Yet behind the glow of progress lies a darker truth: vision in Ghana often attracts suspicion. Despite KGL Group’s undeniable contributions to revenue mobilisation and social development, the company has not been spared the murky undercurrents of politics and institutional hostility.

In recent years, the Group has found itself navigating a maze of regulatory hurdles, delayed approvals, and bureaucratic resistance from state agencies that once praised its work. What should be partnerships for progress have too often become contests of power and perception.

Within business circles, this phenomenon has earned a name, “Economic Witch-Hunting.” It is a quiet but corrosive culture where successful enterprises are viewed not as allies in development but as rivals in influence.

From stalled policy approvals to strategic attempts to curtail KGL’s dominance in digital operations, it is seen by industry players and many others as evidence of a broader pattern, what some call “Strategic Crippling.”

In such an environment, success becomes a liability. The irony is glaring. The same digital initiatives that improved government revenue and employment opportunities are now being met with skepticism, fueled by political insecurities rather than economic logic. Instead of applauding homegrown innovation, certain public actors have chosen to distrust and dismantle it, all in the name of “regulation.”

For Alex Apau Daddy, these challenges have been both personal and institutional. Navigating through the maze of unspoken political allegiances and administrative sabotage, he has had to balance corporate diplomacy with moral conviction. Yet, through it all, he remains steadfast, believing that time, truth, and tangible impact will outlive propaganda.

The implications for Ghana’s economy are chilling. When institutions turn innovation into intimidation, investors, both local and foreign, lose confidence, and progress grinds to a halt. It is a self-inflicted wound, a betrayal not of one man or company, but of Ghana’s own development aspirations.

The greater tragedy, however, lies not in his trials but in what they say about Ghana’s development climate. How can a nation claim to seek economic transformation while sabotaging the very visionaries driving it?

“We cannot build a digital nation while digitally disabling our visionaries.”

Reflective Thoughts—When Greatness Goes Uncelebrated

At its core, the story of Alex Apau Dadey is not just about business; it is a mirror reflecting Ghana’s uneasy relationship with success. We praise visionaries until their light shines too brightly. We celebrate entrepreneurs until they start changing systems. Then we see them as a threat and call them dangerous. His journey mirrors this national paradox.

We glorify politics and ignore production; we exalt rhetoric and silence results. And yet, Mr. Dadey’s journey stands as a reminder that true patriotism is not spoken; it is built. He continues to invest, to employ, to empower, and to believe in a Ghana that sometimes fails to believe in him. Here is a man who has generated employment, supported national revenue, and contributed to social development, yet remains more scrutinised than celebrated.

His story raises uncomfortable questions about Ghana’s relationship with success: Why do we treat excellence with suspicion? Why do we measure patriotism by politics, not productivity? And why do we allow institutional pettiness to cripple innovation?

If Ghana truly wants sustainable development, it must start by protecting, not persecuting, its visionaries. Because nations don’t rise by accident. They rise because men and women like Alex Apau Dadey dare to build when others are busy tearing down. “When history is written, it will not remember those who spoke the loudest; it will remember those who built the longest.”

Sidebar: The KGL Footprint in National Development

  1. Revenue Mobilisation: Digitisation partnership with NLA generating hundreds of millions in state revenue.
    2. Employment Creation: Thousands of direct and indirect jobs across technology, finance, logistics, and customer support sectors.
    3. Education Support: Scholarships and ICT training through KGL Foundation.
    4. Sports Development: Key sponsor of GFA and youth football programs.
    5. Health Initiatives: Rural clinic support and health campaigns under SDG alignment.

Final Reflection

So here lies the irony: A man whose vision modernised systems, funded education, and supported communities is still viewed with suspicion by the very state that benefits from his
success. How many more visionaries like Alex Apau Dadey must Ghana quietly crucify before realising they are its greatest national treasures?

  • President Commissions 36.5 Million Dollars Hospital In The Tain District
  • You Will Not Go Free For Killing An Hard Working MP – Akufo-Addo To MP’s Killer
  • I Will Lead You To Victory – Ato Forson Assures NDC Supporters

Visit Our Social Media for More

About Author

c16271dd987343c7ec4ccd40968758b74d64e6d6c084807e9eb8de11a77c1a1d?s=150&d=mm&r=g

hbtvghana

See author's posts

Discover interesting ones too

Women’s Bank a lifeline, but vulnerable men are sinking too – GUTA president pleads

Women’s Bank a lifeline, but vulnerable men are sinking too – GUTA president pleads

0
VAT reform ends years of business pain – GNCCI boss declares major victory

VAT reform ends years of business pain – GNCCI boss declares major victory

0

Complex VAT system is dead – GNCCI says simpler regime will ease prices and compliance stress

Japan movie releases postponed in China after Taiwan row

Trump says ‘we’ll be selling’ F-35s to Saudi Arabia

Saudi crown prince to visit US with defence, AI, nuclear on agenda

Daddy Lumba: ‘Controversial’ video admitted in court as lawyers cross-examine Akosua Serwaa Fosuh

Gazans say they paid $2,000 per seat for flight to South Africa

Japan warns citizens in China about safety as diplomatic crisis deepens

Ato Forson is right: If it were easy, NPP would have done it

  • Dr. Musah Abdulai: If the Chief Justice returns: Will it lead to reset, redemption, or rupture?

    Dr. Musah Abdulai: If the Chief Justice returns: Will it lead to reset, redemption, or rupture?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Haruna Iddrisu urges review of salary disparities between doctors in academia and health service

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • No justification for higher GAF entry age – Col. Festus Aboagye (Rtd.)

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Farewell, River Ayensu

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • We are coming for you – CID boss tells criminals

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Follow Homebase Tv

  • About Homebase Tv | Hbtvghana.com
  • Advertise
  • Broadcast Live
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Vacancies
  • Contact Us – Connect With Us

© 2014 Total Enjoyment & Proper News

No Result
View All Result

© 2014 Total Enjoyment & Proper News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT

Add New Playlist

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.