A one-day seminar focused on competition economics, policy and law has taken place in Accra. The seminar was attended by legal and consumer representatives from public and private organisations across various industries, as well some members of the judiciary. It was organised by the Competition and Markets Centre, with competition law experts from King’s College, delivering the lecture.
Opening the seminar, Benson Nutsukpui, Managing Partner of Kuenyehia &
Nutsukpui, and a former President of the Ghana Bar Association underscored the
urgent need for a comprehensive and coherent competition law framework in
Ghana. He described the current regulatory regime as fragmented, relying on
scattered statutes and sector-specific mandates, which are inadequate for
addressing complex market dynamics such as cartels, abuse of dominance, and
merger control. Drawing from practical experience, he cited the prolonged
litigation between Internet Ghana Limited and Ghana Telecom as evidence of the
inefficiencies created by the absence of a dedicated competition authority,
noting that such disputes could have been resolved more effectively within a
structured regime.
Benson Nutsukpui, Managing Partner of Kuenyehia & Nutsukpui
“What we do not have is a coherent, economy-wide
competition statute that addresses cartels, abuse of dominance, and merger
control in a systematic way. The result is a framework that is woefully
inadequate to the demands of a modern market economy,” he stated, emphasising
that Ghana is at a pivotal policy juncture, with a draft Competition Policy and
Bill still to be enacted, providing stakeholders with a crucial opportunity to
develop a strong and future-proof framework. Highlighting the importance of clarity
in legal drafting, he warned against poorly calibrated provisions, stating that
“a competition regime that departs from settled principles… can produce
regulatory outcomes that harm the very markets it seeks to protect.” He also
noted regional developments, including the AfCFTA Protocol on Competition
Policy, as emphasising the need for alignment to avoid putting Ghanaian
businesses at a disadvantage. Mr. Nutsukpui described the seminar as a timely
platform for collaborative engagement among legal, economic, and regulatory
actors, expressing confidence that such dialogue will translate into actionable
reforms. As he notes, “some conversations are too important to delay,”
reinforcing the urgency and significance of advancing Ghana’s competition
policy agenda.
The keynote speaker for
the one-day seminar, Dr. Juliette Twumasi-Anokye, who chairs the ECOWAS
Regional Competition Authority’s decision-making Council, framed the debate
within Ghana’s regional and continental commitments. She noted that the ECOWAS
Treaty and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Protocol on
Competition Policy made coherent domestic enforcement not just desirable, but
essential.
Dr. Juliet
Twumasi-Anokye, Chair ECOWAS Regional Competition Authority Council
“Competition law is at
its core protecting the process of competition—not competitors. It must ensure
markets remain open, dynamic, and innovative. For us in Ghana, this is not
merely a legal, economic or even a political issue; it is a crucial developmental
imperative,” Dr. Twumasi-Anokye stated. She highlighted the risks of fragmented
oversight, digital market complexities, and the need for institutional
capacity, adding: “Effective competition enforcement requires more than
legislation—it requires skilled professionals, economic expertise, judicial
understanding, and strong investigative tools. Investment in capacity building
must remain of the utmost priority.”
Peter Alexiadis, Visiting
Professor at King’s College London and former Partner-in-Charge of Gibson, Dunn
& Crutcher’s Brussels office, addressed the technical gaps in the draft
Bill, particularly the treatment of intellectual property rights and the
definition of market power. He emphasised that a competition regime that
departs from internationally accepted methodologies risked producing outcomes
that harmed the very markets it sought to protect.
Professor David Bailey
(left) and Professor Peter Alexiadis, facilitating the seminar
David Bailey KC,
Professor of Practice Law at King’s College London and Standing Counsel to the
UK Competition and Markets Authority, underscored the importance of aligning
Ghana’s framework with evolving global practice, particularly in digital
markets. He called for a regime that balances rigorous enforcement with
predictability for businesses, noting that well-designed competition law serves
as an enabler of innovation rather than a constraint.
Kofi Datsa, Managing
Director of the Competition and Markets Center, organizers of the seminar
The Managing Director of
the Competition & Markets Center, Mr. Kofi Datsa, reaffirmed the seminar’s
purpose as a final window for constructive input before the Bill is laid before
Parliament. “Once a bill passes, the architecture is fixed. Today, it is still
open. This seminar is designed not merely to educate, but to galvanise
stakeholders—lawmakers, regulators, the judiciary, and the business
community—to engage with the drafts and ensure that Ghana’s competition law is
built on sound principles from the outset. We are grateful to our distinguished
speakers and all participants for committing to this critical national
conversation,” Mr Datsa said.
Participants at the
seminar included representatives of the Ministry of Communications,
Digitalisation and Innovation, sectoral regulators such as the Public Utility
Regulatory Authority (PURC), National Communications Authority (NCA), National
Insurance Commission (NIC). Also in attendance were representatives from the
Chamber of Telecommunications, GRIDCO, MTN, AT, C-Squared, CUTS International, and
lawyers from firms such as BELA, AB & David, Law Trust, N. Dowouna and Co,
Amenuvor and Associates, among others.
About the Competition & Markets
Center (CMC)
The Competition & Markets Center is an
Accra-based firm specialised in competition economics, policy and law with an
initial focus on laying a sound foundation for the forthcoming competition law
regime in Ghana.
Media Contact:
Competition & Markets Center (CMC)
Email: info@cmc-ghana.com

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