A high-level forum convened by ODI Global, the Government of Ghana’s 24-Hour Economy Authority, Bank of Ghana and the AfCFTA Secretariat today launch Neofingo, a network needed to close the trade finance gap between the UK and West Africa.
The launch brought together regulators, financiers, entrepreneurs, policymakers, trade and development experts, and technologists in London and Accra for the event.
ODI Global, in partnership with the Government of Ghana’s 24-Hour Economy Authority, the AfCFTA Secretariat, and Bank of Ghana, today announced the development of a network and protocol called Neofingo at a forum held simultaneously in London and Accra.
Neofingo is a Digital Trade Finance Corridor designed to close Ghana’s annual trade finance gap by connecting UK neobanks with Ghanaian and African fintech ecosystems.
The partners developing the network aim to build and resource the UK-Ghana Digital Trade Finance Corridor. The launch and announcement of Neofingo followed a consultative online exercise held on 24th March 2026.
The new corridor will be a shared digital public infrastructure to reconnect Ghanaian SME exporters with the international trade finance system, including the entrepreneurial Ghanaian diaspora. The initiative further leverages both the AfCFTA digital trade infrastructure (AfCFTA Hub) and the recently launched London to Accra platform supported by both the Bank of Ghana and the Office of the Mayor of London.
Ghana faces a trade finance gap estimated at $7 billion annually, part of a broader $120 billion shortfall across Sub-Saharan Africa. The root cause extends beyond a shortage of capital to include an erosion of trust infrastructure.
For example, the retreat of correspondent banking has left exporters, especially small and medium ones, unable to access letters of credit, which are the foundational instruments of international trade. The result is that goods can be produced but without money they cannot move.
Sadly, the costs of risk fall disproportionately on smaller businesses and emerging-market producers.
The proposed UK–Ghana Digital Trade Finance Corridor would address this by building shared digital infrastructure for trade documents, compliance data and letters of credit.
It draws on Ghanaian pro-fintech policies, the UK Electronic Trade Documents Act 2023, open standards including ISO 20022, the ICC’s eUCP and recent developments in the remittance corridor between the UK and Africa.
Ghana’s advanced financial regulatory environment, its role as a founding participant (and host) in the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), and the ambitions of the 24-Hour Economy initiative make it a natural anchor for West Africa’s entry into this emerging global architecture.
The Presidential Adviser on the 24-Hour Economy, Mr. Augustus Goosie Tanoh, said:
“The global trade finance system was not designed for African SMEs—it was designed around them. NeoFingo changes that. It rebuilds trade finance as shared infrastructure, so that a shea butter exporter in Tamale can access the same digital letter of credit as a commodity desk in the City of London. That is what structural transformation looks like.”
Wamkele Mene, Secretary-General of the AfCFTA Secretariat, emphasized the importance of connecting businesses to markets:
“African SMEs have the products and the ambition. What they’ve lacked is the financial infrastructure to connect with buyers beyond the continent. Neofingo helps close that gap.”
Dr. Johnson Asiama, Governor of the Bank of Ghana, highlighted the role of trusted systems in enabling trade:
“We’ve spent years building payment systems that work for Ghanaians. Neofingo takes that same approach across borders, so that trade can happen on trusted rails, and eventually, more of it can be settled in our own currencies.”
Dr. Christian Rogg, British High Commissioner to Ghana, noted the deeper ties that make the corridor possible:
“The UK and Ghana are already connected by people, history, and language. Neofingo adds a financial layer to that connection and makes it easier for businesses here and in the diaspora to trade, invest, and grow together.”
The forum and launch of Neofingo will bring together central bank governors, trade finance institutions, UK and African fintech leaders, development finance institutions, multilateral bodies, and legal and policy experts and SMEs.
It will examine what governance, standards and institutional architecture a UK–Ghana Digital Trade Finance Corridor would require in practice, and how to build the multi-stakeholder community needed to make it a reality.
It is the hope of the partners that thousands of trade actors and their employees and supply chain partners would be the ultimate beneficiaries of the Neofingo Digital Trade Finance Corridor.