Executive Summary
Ghana’s 24-Hour Plus (24H+) Economy Initiative has generated national excitement and international attention. The vision is clear. The intention is bold. The programme components and strategies are comprehensive. The policies are well-articulated.
Yet, despite this clarity, the initiative as currently presented largely ignores the messy, real-world realities of Ghana’s urban economy—informal traders, youth unemployment, squatter settlements, lack of SME financing, and regional inequalities.
To succeed, the 24H+ Economy must move beyond blueprints and branding to confront and incorporate the actual lived experiences of Ghanaians. This write-up offers a roadmap for doing just that.
- The Disconnect Between Vision and Reality
While the Full 24H+ Programme Document outlines elegant strategies—ranging from infrastructure upgrades to private sector partnerships and skills training—it lacks concrete mechanisms for engaging:
- The millions of street and market vendors already operate late into the night.
- The urban poor living in squatter settlements without access to water, electricity, or security.
- The youth in slum areas who survive on gig work and side hustles, not formal employment.
- The SMEs are struggling with access to credit, formalisation, and permits.
The policy speaks from above, not from the ground.
✳️ A night economy cannot be superimposed from the top down. It must be grown from the people who already live and work at night.
- Grounded Solutions for Real Ghanaian Challenges
- Informal Traders and Night Markets
Informal traders already operate at night—selling roasted plantain, mobile airtime, food, clothing, etc.—but do so in unsafe, unregulated environments.
Solution:
- Establish Designated Night Market Zones (DNMZs) in known informal hotspots.
- Provide solar lighting, mobile toilets, plastic shelters, and security.
- Register traders using Ghana Card-linked Night Economy IDs for access to training and microloans.
- Squatter Settlements and Urban Poverty
Squatter settlements form the base of the urban economy but are completely absent from the current 24H+ policy narrative.
Solution:
- Set up Community Micro-Hubs within these areas for informal trade, skills development, and access to basic services.
- Pilot “Midnight Clinics” and “Night Schools” to serve the working poor and children in informal areas.
- Partner with NGOs and faith-based groups already active in these communities.
- Youth Unemployment and Gig Workers
The 24H+ document lists skills training broadly but does not reflect the youth survival economy in Ghana: okada, delivery riders, phone repairers, and online vendors.
Solution:
- Create 24H+ Digital Youth Hubs where young people can access:
- Wi-Fi and power
- Business development tools
- Mentorship and cooperative membership
- Promote gig-based cooperatives (e.g., Rider Coop, Vendor Coop) for better contracts and protection.
- Japan’s “Service Area” Model: Localising the Lessons
Japan’s highway service areas offer 24/7 clean, safe, commercial environments combining food, fuel, rest, and local product markets.
Ghanaian adaptation:
- Develop Rest and Trade Hubs along major highways with police presence, solar lights, bus terminals, and OIC goods.
- Incorporate local night crafts, food, and services into these hubs.
- Let cooperatives and district assemblies jointly manage these hubs.
- Cooperatives: A Structuring Tool for the Informal Night Economy
Cooperatives can provide structure, solidarity, and scalability in the unregulated 24H+ space.
Recommended Actions:
- Register all 24H+ informal businesses under Night Economy Cooperatives by sector or locality.
- Provide co-ops access to:
- Public procurement
- Group microloans
- Bulk purchasing power
- Business development services
- Diaspora Engagement: Global Capital for Local Realities
Ghana’s diaspora remains a powerful untapped engine for night-economy development. But the 24H+ document makes no strategic reference to diaspora capital, skills, or networks.
Integration Measures:
- Create a Diaspora Night Economy Investment Window, inviting co-ownership in community markets, hubs, and cooperatives.
- Launch a Ghana 24H+ Digital Portal connecting diaspora mentors and investors to local SMEs.
- Appoint Diaspora Coordinators to support policy awareness and monitoring globally.
- Funding and Supervision: A National Compact
Without funding and strong coordination, the initiative risks collapsing into policy fatigue. Yet there is no clear costing or legislative backing for most proposed elements.
Urgent Measures:
- Legislate and fund the National 24H+ Economy Authority (N24EA) under the Office of the President.
- Allocate dedicated funds under the GhanaCARES Programme, DACF, and Youth StartUp Grants.
- Create a multi-stakeholder board with MMDA reps, the private sector, cooperatives, and academia.
- Communication and Cultural Shift
People will not embrace the night economy unless they understand, trust, and feel safe within it.
Communication Strategies:
- Town hall meetings and live market broadcasts
- Explainer videos and street interviews in Ga, Twi, Hausa, Ewe, and Dagbani
- Ghana 24H+ app with features like:
- Trader registration
- Night patrol reporting
- Incentive tracking
Conclusion: A Foundation Already Exists, But Needs Support
So yes—the informal night economy is already happening in Ghana. What’s missing is a deliberate strategy to structure, protect, and scale it under national policy.
The government’s 24H+ initiative must:
- Recognise these actors as stakeholders
- Invest in upgrading their environments
- Help them transition into formal cooperatives or SMEs
- Ensure urban safety, waste management, and lighting infrastructure
By Dr. Isaac Yaw Asiedu
































