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Ghana Citizenship > News > Business > Ghana gold royalty hike draws concerns from US, China, and Western governments
Gold nuggets on Ghanaian 100 cedi banknotes representing Ghana's gold mining industry and proposed royalty hike.

Ghana gold royalty hike draws concerns from US, China, and Western governments

 

Ghana’s proposed Ghana gold royalty hike is drawing unusual diplomatic attention. Reuters reported on March 5, 2026, that the United States, China, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and South Africa raised concerns about Ghana’s plan to replace its fixed 5 percent gold royalty with a sliding scale that could rise as high as 12 percent when gold prices climb. In plain English, Ghana wants a bigger share of the upside when bullion prices surge, while foreign governments and mining companies worry that the new formula could make operating in Ghana much more expensive.

That matters because Ghana is not a marginal gold market. It is Africa’s top gold producer, and Reuters reported that the country produced a record 6 million ounces in 2025. When fiscal terms move in Accra, the effects can reach boardrooms in Denver, Johannesburg, Perth, London, and Beijing. It also matters at home because gold royalties help fund the state, and part of that money reaches mining communities.

 

What happened in the Ghana gold royalty hike story

According to Reuters, Ghana wants to replace its fixed 5 percent royalty with a sliding scale between 5 percent and 12 percent linked to bullion prices. Reuters also reported that diplomats from several major countries met Ghana’s lands minister and presented a joint document outlining concerns about the proposal.

You’ll notice the wording here matters. The article does not show that these countries blocked the policy or imposed sanctions. What it does show is that they formally raised concerns at a high level, which is unusual for a mining tax dispute. Normally, this kind of pushback comes from companies and industry groups first. This time, the diplomatic community stepped in as well.

 

Ghana’s current mineral royalty system

The Ghana Revenue Authority states that, subject to any fiscal stability agreement, the mineral royalty rate is 5 percent of the total revenue earned from mining operations. That is the baseline Ghana is now trying to replace with a more flexible, price-linked approach.

Rule Current Position Source
Mineral royalty rate 5 percent of total revenue from mining operations Ghana Revenue Authority
Applies subject to stability agreement Yes Ghana Revenue Authority

That fixed-rate model is simple. Companies know what they owe, and the state knows what it collects. Ghana’s new idea is different. It would rise and fall with market prices.

 

What the proposed Ghana gold royalty hike would change

MyJoyOnline reported in December 2025 that the government laid before Parliament the Minerals and Mining Royalty Regulations, 2025, a Legislative Instrument designed to introduce variable royalty bands for gold, lithium, and other mineral resources. The Minister for Lands and Natural Resources said the point of the system is to let the state derive maximum benefit in good times while offering relief to investors when prices fall.

Royalty Structure How It Works Why Government Supports It
Current fixed rate 5 percent regardless of gold price Simple and predictable
Proposed sliding scale 5 percent to 12 percent linked to bullion prices Captures more revenue during price surges

Reuters reported that the upper end of the proposed range could take effect soon unless amended or withdrawn. That timing is part of why this dispute has become so urgent.

 

Which countries raised concerns

Reuters identified six countries whose diplomatic missions in Accra reportedly raised concerns about the proposal. These countries all have strong commercial or corporate exposure to Ghana’s mining sector.

Country Reported Diplomatic Role Why It Likely Cares
United States Embassy raised concerns US-linked mining exposure, including Newmont
China Embassy raised concerns Chinese-owned mines and strong commercial ties
United Kingdom High Commission raised concerns Mining finance and corporate exposure through London markets
Canada High Commission raised concerns Canadian mining investment ecosystem
Australia High Commission raised concerns Australian mining companies active in Africa
South Africa Embassy raised concerns South African mining majors operate in Ghana

This is where the story gets interesting. The United States and China do not usually line up on resource policy. Yet here, both appear worried about the same fiscal change in Ghana. That tells you how important the Ghanaian gold sector is to outside investors.

 

Which mining companies are affected

Reuters reported that leaders of Newmont, Gold Fields, AngloGold Ashanti, and Perseus voiced concerns directly to Ghana’s lands minister. It also said Chinese-owned mines including Zijin, Chifeng, and Shandong Gold filed formal protests.

Company Country Link Reported Position
Newmont United States CEO concerns reportedly raised privately
Gold Fields South Africa CEO concerns reportedly raised privately
AngloGold Ashanti South Africa CEO concerns reportedly raised privately
Perseus Mining Australia CEO concerns reportedly raised privately
Zijin Mining China Formal protest reported
Chifeng Gold China Formal protest reported
Shandong Gold China Formal protest reported

Industry groups argue that a 12 percent royalty on gross revenue, not profit, could squeeze margins, delay projects, and reduce investment. That is an industry claim, not a neutral legal finding, but it is central to understanding the pushback.

 

How much tax mining companies already pay in Ghana

The Ghana Chamber of Mines says the existing fiscal burden is already heavy. In its published warning, the Chamber listed a 5 percent royalty on gross revenue, a 3 percent Growth and Sustainability Levy on gross revenue, a 10 percent free carried interest for the state, a 35 percent corporate income tax, and an 8 percent tax on dividends.

Tax or State Interest Rate Body Citing It
Mineral royalty 5 percent GRA / Ghana Chamber of Mines
Growth and Sustainability Levy 3 percent Ghana Chamber of Mines
Free carried interest for the state 10 percent Ghana Chamber of Mines
Corporate income tax 35 percent Ghana Chamber of Mines
Tax on dividends 8 percent Ghana Chamber of Mines

From the government’s point of view, that still does not answer the key political question: if gold prices are running hot, should Ghana keep collecting the same royalty rate as if nothing changed? That is the heart of this fight.

 

Why this matters for Ghana

Reuters reported on February 12, 2026, that Ghana produced a record 6 million ounces of gold in 2025. That makes the stakes obvious. Gold is not just another export line. It is one of the engines of the Ghanaian economy. If the state captures more revenue, that can strengthen public finances. If the terms become too aggressive, projects may slow down. Both outcomes matter in a country where mining jobs, royalties, and local development all carry real political weight.

There is also a broader lesson here. Across Africa, governments are trying to capture more value from natural resources. Ghana is not moving in a vacuum. Still, because Ghana has a reputation for relative legal stability, investors watch fiscal changes in Accra very closely.

 

What happens next

The proposed royalty regime is still contested. Parliament, the executive, mining companies, and foreign investors all have something at stake. Ghana may keep the broad structure and adjust the bands. It may delay implementation. Or it may push ahead and test how much investor resistance the market will tolerate. For now, the signal is clear: Ghana wants more value from gold, and the outside world is paying attention.

 

Sources

 

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