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Bank insolvency in Ghana has entered a new regulatory phase. The Corporate Insolvency and Restructuring Act, 2020 (Act 1015), commonly referred to as CIRA, now operates alongside a maturing regime of insolvency practitioner licensing under CIRIP and updated guidance from the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC). For banks and specialised deposit-taking institutions (SDIs), the interaction between CIRA, the Banks and Specialised Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016 (Act 930), and Bank of Ghana (BoG) resolution powers creates a layered compliance landscape. This playbook provides CFOs, in-house counsel, risk teams and secured creditors with the operational steps, checklists and regulatory engagement templates required to navigate bank insolvency in Ghana as at mid-2026.
CIRA (Act 1015) represents the most significant overhaul of corporate insolvency law in Ghana in decades. It introduced formal administration (business rescue), company voluntary arrangements, and a modernised liquidation regime for companies generally. However, its application to banks and financial institutions is not straightforward. The Act defers to sector-specific legislation, principally Act 930 for banks and SDIs, and the Insurance Act, 2021 (Act 1061) for insurers, where those statutes contain their own resolution and winding-up provisions.
The practical effect is a dual-track system. Where Act 930 provides the BoG with resolution powers, including the ability to appoint statutory managers, revoke licences and initiate winding-up, those powers take precedence. CIRA’s administration and restructuring mechanisms may still be available where sector-specific legislation does not provide an equivalent rescue procedure, though the boundaries remain subject to interpretation. Industry observers expect ongoing judicial guidance to clarify these overlaps as more cases reach the courts.
Understanding which insolvency test applies is the first operational question for any bank facing distress. CIRA provides two principal tests applicable to companies generally:
For banks, the BoG applies additional supervisory triggers under Act 930, including capital adequacy ratios falling below prescribed minimums, persistent liquidity shortfalls and failure to meet prudential returns. These BoG-specific triggers can activate the regulator’s resolution powers independently, and often before, a formal CIRA insolvency test is satisfied. CFOs and compliance officers should therefore monitor both the statutory insolvency thresholds and the BoG’s prudential benchmarks simultaneously.
The following table maps the principal statutes, their target entities and the key implications for banks navigating insolvency or restructuring:
| Statute | Applies to | Key bank implication |
|---|---|---|
| CIRA (Act 1015) | Companies generally; potentially available where sector law lacks rescue mechanism | Provides administration, CVA and modernised liquidation; defers to sector-specific Acts where those Acts contain resolution procedures |
| Banks and SDI Act (Act 930) | Banks, SDIs, financial holding companies | BoG may appoint statutory managers, revoke licences, and petition for winding-up; resolution powers override CIRA where applicable |
| Insurance Act (Act 1061) | Insurers and reinsurers | National Insurance Commission exercises parallel resolution functions; analogous carve-out from CIRA |
The critical takeaway for practitioners is that bank resolution in Ghana begins with Act 930 and BoG powers, and CIRA fills gaps where those powers do not extend to formal business rescue or where a hybrid approach, combining BoG oversight with court-supervised restructuring, is sought.
When a bank in Ghana faces financial distress, the available resolution pathways depend on which authority triggers the process and which statutory framework governs. The following comparison table summarises the principal options for financial institution restructuring:
| Option | Triggering authority | Key immediate steps and impact |
|---|---|---|
| BoG-led resolution (specialised) | Bank of Ghana, statutory powers under Act 930 | BoG assumes control via statutory management or official administration; depositor protection measures activated; creditor enforcement restricted; ORC and CIRIP notified as required |
| Administration / business rescue (CIRA) | Court or licensed insolvency practitioner (where CIRA applies) | Automatic moratorium on legal proceedings and enforcement; administrator appointed; restructuring plan developed and put to creditor vote within prescribed timeframes |
| Official liquidation | Court (on petition by BoG, creditors or the company) | Asset realisation commences; creditor claims process initiated; depositor priority rules and BoG deposit protection consequences apply |
| Statutory management | Bank of Ghana (Act 930) | BoG-appointed manager assumes all board and management powers; existing directors suspended; objective is stabilisation or orderly wind-down |
| Scheme of arrangement | Court (application by company, creditors or liquidator) | Negotiated compromise between the bank and classes of creditors; court approval binds dissenting creditors; may run alongside BoG oversight |
Under Act 930, the BoG holds broad resolution powers over licensed banks. These include the authority to place a bank under statutory management, to restrict or revoke its licence, and to petition the High Court for a winding-up order. The BoG may also facilitate a purchase-and-assumption transaction, transferring viable assets and insured deposits to a healthy institution, or establish a bridge institution to maintain critical banking services during the resolution period.
The immediate effect of a BoG-initiated resolution is a stay on creditor enforcement actions. Secured creditors cannot enforce their security without BoG consent, and ongoing legal proceedings against the bank are typically stayed. The BoG’s register of institutions in liquidation, maintained on the Bank of Ghana website, provides a public record of entities subject to resolution or winding-up.
Where Act 930 does not provide for a formal business rescue procedure equivalent to CIRA administration, industry observers expect that a bank or its creditors could apply to the court for the appointment of an administrator under CIRA. This remains an evolving area of law, and the likely practical effect will be that courts assess applications on a case-by-case basis, weighing BoG’s supervisory jurisdiction against the policy objective of preserving going-concern value. Practitioners should anticipate that any such application will require the BoG to be joined as a party or at minimum notified.
When rescue is not viable, official liquidation follows. For banks, the BoG typically petitions the court following licence revocation. A liquidator, who must be a licensed insolvency practitioner, is appointed to realise assets and distribute proceeds in accordance with the statutory priority of claims. Depositors rank above general unsecured creditors, and the Ghana Deposit Protection Corporation’s role in reimbursing insured deposits becomes directly relevant.
Early engagement with the Bank of Ghana is not merely advisable, it is a regulatory obligation for any licensed institution showing signs of distress. The BoG’s supervisory framework requires banks to notify the regulator when capital adequacy ratios breach minimum thresholds, when liquidity positions deteriorate materially, or when the board forms the view that the institution may be unable to meet its obligations as they fall due.
The following table sets out the core documents a bank should prepare and submit to the BoG at the earliest sign of financial difficulty:
| Document | Why BoG needs it | Action owner |
|---|---|---|
| Current banking licence and compliance certificates | Confirms regulatory status and any existing conditions or restrictions | Company Secretary |
| Liquidity position report (daily/weekly) | Assesses immediate cash-flow solvency and ability to honour depositor withdrawals | CFO / Treasury |
| Complete depositor register | Enables BoG to assess depositor protection exposure and plan any deposit transfer | Head of Operations / IT |
| Interbank exposures and counterparty schedule | Maps systemic risk and potential contagion to other financial institutions | Risk Management |
| Schedule of eligible financial contracts | Required for netting and close-out analysis under BoG guidance on eligible financial contracts | Legal / Treasury |
| Board resolution authorising management actions | Confirms governance authority for emergency measures and regulator engagement | Board Chair / Company Secretary |
| Asset quality and provisioning report | Assesses balance-sheet solvency and identifies impaired or non-performing assets | CFO / Internal Audit |
Depositor protection is a central concern in any bank resolution. Ghana’s deposit protection framework, operated through the Ghana Deposit Protection Corporation, provides a statutory insurance safety net for qualifying deposits. When the BoG places a bank into resolution or liquidation, insured depositors are entitled to reimbursement up to the prescribed coverage limit. Deposits exceeding the insured threshold rank as preferred claims in the liquidation waterfall, ahead of general unsecured creditors.
The interplay between CIRA and depositor protection is significant. If a bank enters administration under CIRA (where applicable), the moratorium on enforcement does not extinguish depositor rights, rather, it suspends their enforcement while a restructuring plan is developed. If the plan fails and liquidation follows, the statutory depositor priority reasserts itself. CFOs and in-house counsel should ensure that depositor registers are accurate, up to date, and capable of rapid extraction, as the BoG will require this data within days, not weeks, of any resolution trigger.
The rollout of CIRIP (Corporate Insolvency and Restructuring Insolvency Practitioners) licensing under CIRA has created a formal accreditation pathway for insolvency practitioners in Ghana. The Ghana Association of Restructuring and Insolvency Advisors (GARIA) serves as the professional body supporting CIRIP-accredited practitioners, while the ORC maintains the register of licensed practitioners authorised to accept appointments.
For bank insolvency cases, the selection of an appropriately qualified practitioner is critical. The practitioner must hold current CIRIP accreditation, must be registered with the ORC, and must have no disqualifying conflict of interest, including any prior relationship as auditor, adviser or director of the distressed bank or its group companies. The BoG retains the right to object to any proposed practitioner appointment in a bank resolution context, and early confirmation of the practitioner’s credentials with both the ORC and BoG is strongly recommended.
Before confirming any insolvency practitioner appointment in a bank case, the appointing party should complete the following verification steps:
Cross-border insolvency in Ghana is governed by the provisions within CIRA dealing with recognition of foreign proceedings. While Ghana has not adopted the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency in its entirety, CIRA contains provisions enabling foreign representatives to seek recognition and provisional relief from Ghanaian courts.
Foreign secured creditors dealing with a Ghanaian bank restructuring should follow this prioritised action checklist:
Enforcement timelines vary. Early indications suggest that straightforward recognition applications can be determined within two to four months, but contested matters or those involving BoG objections may take considerably longer. Foreign creditors should factor this timeline into their recovery strategy.
When signs of financial distress emerge, structured action within defined timeframes can mean the difference between a viable restructuring and a disorderly collapse. The following plan provides a template for bank insolvency in Ghana situations, adapted for the CIRA and BoG regulatory environment:
The 2017–2019 banking sector consolidation in Ghana remains the most significant episode of bank resolution in the country’s recent history. The BoG revoked the licences of several banks and SDIs, consolidated others, and established a bridge institution (Consolidated Bank Ghana) to absorb viable assets and protect depositors. The root causes included chronic under-provisioning for non-performing loans, excessive related-party lending in breach of prudential limits, and material weaknesses in corporate governance.
The key lesson for 2026 is structural: early regulatory engagement and transparent reporting would have prevented several of those failures from reaching the point of licence revocation. Under the current framework, with CIRA, CIRIP licensing and enhanced BoG supervisory tools all now operational, the expectation is that distressed banks will engage the resolution framework proactively rather than reactively. Boards that delay notification or obscure asset-quality deterioration face personal liability exposure under both Act 930 and CIRA’s wrongful-trading provisions.
The following resources should be prepared and maintained by every bank’s compliance and legal function as part of its resolution readiness programme:
These templates should be reviewed and updated at least annually or immediately following any material change in the bank’s financial condition, regulatory requirements or applicable legislation.
Bank insolvency in Ghana demands a dual awareness of both the corporate insolvency framework under CIRA and the specialised resolution powers of the Bank of Ghana. The 2026 landscape, with CIRIP licensing now operational, ORC registers active, and BoG supervisory expectations heightened, leaves no room for delay. CFOs, in-house counsel and boards of financial institutions should treat resolution readiness as an ongoing compliance obligation, not a contingency plan. For specialist guidance on navigating this framework, explore the Ghana insolvency practice area or search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for accredited restructuring and insolvency professionals.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Audrey Naa Dei Kotey at Audrey Grey, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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