Ghana is dismantling the monopoly structure underpinning its 5G rollout, opting instead for a market-driven spectrum allocation regime designed to unlock competition and fast-track nationwide deployment.
In a significant policy recalibration, the Minister for Communication, Innovations, and Digital Technologies, Sam Nartey George, announced that the government will open Ghana’s 5G spectrum to competitive bidding, effectively ending the exclusivity previously granted to Next-Gen Infrastructure Company (NGIC).
NGIC has until now operated as the country’s sole shared neutral infrastructure provider for 4G and 5G services under a wholesale framework intended to lower market entry barriers and centralize infrastructure investment.
However, the single-licensee model has faced criticism over pace and scalability, with industry stakeholders pushing for greater autonomy in network deployment.
Announcing the shift at the 30th-anniversary launch of the National Communications Authority (NCA), George framed the move as a strategic expansion rather than a policy reversal.
“The decision has been taken to remove the current exclusivity mandate… and offer spectrum resources to the market through a national competitive bidding process,” George stated during the National Communications Authority’s (NCA) 30th-anniversary launch.
The Minister emphasized that the reform does not dismantle the existing wholesale framework outright. Instead, it “provides multiple options for our market players,” signalling a hybrid structure that retains NGIC’s role while permitting telecom operators to acquire spectrum directly.
The pivot reflects a broader objective of “democratizing” digital access by injecting competitive pressure into Ghana’s high-speed broadband ecosystem.
By allowing major telecom operators to bid for their own spectrum allocations, the government aims to accelerate rollout timelines that have been constrained under the single-provider architecture.
Industry observers note that while NGIC’s model was designed to reduce duplication of infrastructure and spread capital expenditure, dominant telecom operators likely sought direct spectrum ownership to guarantee service quality, network optimization, and product differentiation in an increasingly data-driven market.
The NCA is expected to receive formal implementation directives within days, with the spectrum auction projected to commence in the coming weeks, marking the beginning of a new competitive phase in Ghana’s 5G evolution.
