GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Republic of Ghana

Republic of Ghana

Sovereign constitutional state and national government

GhanaNational Government and Constitutional RepublicPresidency of the Republic of GhanaParliament of GhanaJudicial Service of GhanaOffice of the Special ProsecutorMinistry of Gender, Children and Social ProtectionFree SHS Secretariat
65
GOOD

of 100 · improving trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment

Standing

65/100

Raw Score

56/85

Confidence

65%

Evidence

Broad

About

Ghana’s public record shows a real constitutional and social-welfare foundation, repeated democratic resilience, and meaningful safety-net delivery, but also persistent corruption and rights failures.

The observable record supports an above-neutral but mixed reading. Ghana’s state institutions publicly ground themselves in constitutional accountability, maintain a durable pattern of competitive elections and peaceful transfers, and have built major social interventions such as LEAP and Free SHS. The same record is constrained by repeated corruption pressure, unresolved rights risks, environmental enforcement failures, and periods of severe fiscal crisis that damaged public trust and service capacity.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview64%(16/25)
Contribution to Others67%(20/30)
Personal Discipline60%(6/10)
Reliability60%(3/5)
Stability Under Pressure73%(11/15)

Ghana’s state institutions visibly pursue constitutional accountability and public welfare often enough to clear a merely theoretical reading, and the country’s democratic resilience is a real strength. The record still contains too many unresolved corruption, rights, and implementation gaps to justify a stronger integrity classification.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication3/5

There is real constitutional continuity and public reporting, but corruption scandals, enforcement gaps, and implementation disputes keep the integrity score mixed.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently2/5

As a secular state, Ghana is not evaluated on devotional ritual; the observable analogue is periodic civic and constitutional discipline.

Gives obligatory charity4/5

The state funds structured public support through social protection, health financing, and public education obligations.

Core Worldview

Belief in god4/5

The constitutional preamble invokes God and explicitly commits the state to freedom, justice, probity, and accountability.

Belief in unseen order3/5

The public framework signals moral order and civic obligation, though not in a deeply devotional institutional form.

Belief in revealed guidance3/5

Guidance is grounded more in constitutional norms and civic law than in explicit revealed doctrine.

Belief in prophets as examples2/5

The institution does not publicly organize itself around prophetic exemplarity.

Belief in accountability last day4/5

The constitutional framework emphasizes public accountability, judicial review, and duties owed to the people.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives3/5

The state has broad family-facing welfare roles, but delivery remains uneven across regions and vulnerable groups.

Helps the poor or stuck5/5

LEAP is a direct poverty-targeted intervention and remains one of the strongest social-care signals in the record.

Helps people who ask directly3/5

There are formal complaint and access channels across agencies, though responsiveness is inconsistent.

Helps free people from constraint2/5

Constitutional rights exist, but the public record includes protest-policing concerns and minority-rights threats.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people4/5

LEAP and Free SHS create concrete support pathways for children and young people in vulnerable households.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people3/5

Recent refugee recognition for Burkinabe asylum seekers is a positive signal, but broader migrant support visibility is limited.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during personal hardship4/5

The constitutional order has remained durable through repeated leadership changes and public stress.

Patient during financial difficulty3/5

The state endured a debt crisis and adopted a recovery programme, but the crisis itself reflects significant stewardship weakness.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Peaceful election concessions and transfers are strong resilience signals, though protest and rights handling remain imperfect.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1957

Ghana becomes independent and establishes a sovereign national government

The Gold Coast became independent as Ghana on March 6, 1957, creating the first sub-Saharan African country to win independence from colonial rule and establishing the modern Ghanaian state.

Created the sovereign institutional base for national self-government and later republican constitutional development.

high
1993

The Fourth Republic restores constitutional civilian rule

After repeated coups and interruptions in parliamentary rule, Ghana returned to constitutional rule in 1993 under the 1992 Constitution, which located sovereignty in the people and bound government to democratic rule, rights protection, and public accountability.

Re-established a durable constitutional framework that has now survived multiple elections and transfers of power.

high
2008

LEAP begins direct cash support for extremely poor and vulnerable households

Ghana’s LEAP programme started disbursing cash in March 2008 and has since expanded from a small pilot to nationwide coverage, providing cash transfers, NHIS linkage, and school-related support to extremely poor and vulnerable households.

Created a durable public social-protection channel targeted at high-vulnerability households.

high
2017

Free SHS removes fee barriers for public senior high school students

The Free SHS policy made public senior high school fees payable by government for qualifying students and framed the policy around cost removal, quality, equity, and infrastructure expansion.

Expanded access to secondary education and strengthened the state’s public commitment to education access.

high
2018

Office of the Special Prosecutor begins specialized anti-corruption enforcement

The Office of the Special Prosecutor was established in 2018 as an autonomous specialized anti-corruption agency with investigative, prosecutorial, asset-recovery, and preventive functions.

Strengthened Ghana’s formal anti-corruption architecture beyond ordinary executive prosecution channels.

medium
2023

IMF approves a US$3 billion support programme after a deep fiscal and debt crisis

The IMF approved a 36-month Extended Credit Facility for Ghana in May 2023 after what it described as a deep economic and financial crisis driven by external shocks and preexisting fiscal and debt vulnerabilities.

Confirmed the severity of Ghana’s fiscal crisis while creating a structured path to stabilization and debt restructuring.

high
2024

Parliament passes a widely criticized anti-LGBT bill

Ghana’s parliament passed the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill in 2024, drawing condemnation from rights groups and international observers who argued it would further criminalize LGBT people and their supporters.

Sharpened concern that constitutional rights protections are not consistently extended to vulnerable minorities.

high
2024

The 2024 election produces another peaceful concession and transfer of power

After the December 7, 2024 election, Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia conceded defeat before the official announcement to preserve peace, and John Dramani Mahama returned to office after the opposition won both the presidency and a parliamentary majority.

Reinforced Ghana’s reputation for competitive elections and peaceful transfers even amid economic frustration.

high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

1993 restoration of constitutional rule

1993

After long periods of coups and military government, Ghana returned to constitutional rule under the Fourth Republic.

Response: The state rebuilt legitimacy through constitutional limits, elections, and institutional differentiation across executive, legislature, and judiciary.

recovery_into_rules_based_governance

2023 debt and inflation crisis

2023

A deep fiscal and debt crisis pushed Ghana into IMF-supported stabilization and debt restructuring.

Response: The government adopted a 36-month programme aimed at restoring macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability.

financial_distress_with_structured_recovery

2024-2025 rights and legitimacy strain

2025

The anti-LGBT bill, illegal-mining protests, and attacks on journalists raised questions about how consistently the state protects rights under pressure.

Response: Some charges against protesters were later dropped and the 2024 anti-LGBT bill lapsed, but the broader tension remained unresolved and the bill was reintroduced.

mixed_rights_response_under_social_pressure

Progression

crisis years

Recent years exposed how corruption pressures, environmental harm, and fiscal fragility could still overwhelm official commitments.

down

current stage

The institution currently reads as improving but still fragile: democratic resilience and economic stabilization are real, yet the credibility gap on rights and corruption remains open.

mixed

early years

The state began with strong anti-colonial legitimacy and a high public-development ambition but moved through unstable early republican and military periods.

mixed

growth years

The Fourth Republic produced a more durable constitutional order and gradually expanded formal democratic legitimacy and public-service architecture.

up

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Competitive elections and peaceful alternation in power
  • Repeated use of public policy to widen access to education and social protection
  • Constitutional language that formally binds government to rights, accountability, and public welfare

Concerns

  • Corruption-control capacity often looks stronger in architecture than in universally trusted outcomes
  • Rights protection is uneven when vulnerable minorities or protesters become politically costly
  • Major implementation gaps persist between national policy commitments and lived conditions

Evidence Quality

10

Strong

3

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: broad

This record evaluates observable institutional behavior and public evidence. It does not infer private intention or flatten all administrations into one moral judgment.