In 1957, when the Ghana emerged from the colonial identity of the Gold Coast, the name itself told a story — a land globally recognised for gold. Nearly seven decades later, gold remains central to our economic identity, foreign exchange stability, and rural livelihoods.
At the heart of this enduring story is the Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM) sector — a sector that sustains hundreds of thousands of Ghanaians and contributes significantly to national output. Today, with the introduction of the Goldbod aggregation framework formalising gold trade and supply chains, Ghana stands at another defining moment in its gold journey.
The Chamber of Licensed Gold Buyers (CLGB) positions itself as the strategic institutional bridge between Ghana’s historic gold legacy and a modern, formalized, transparent ASM economy.
The CLGB Value Proposition to Licensed Gold Buyers (LGBs)
- Structured Market Representation
CLGB provides unified institutional representation for LGBs in policy dialogue with Goldbod, regulators, financial institutions, and development partners. In a newly formalised aggregation environment, structured advocacy ensures that LGBs operate with clarity, stability, and predictability.
2. Structured Financial Access & Working Capital Mobilisation
Gold trading is capital-intensive. CLGB’s coordinated engagement with banks, DFIs, and guarantee institutions unlocks:
- Structured working capital facilities
- Risk-sharing and guarantee schemes
- Trade finance solutions
- Responsible gold sourcing financing
This transforms LGBs from informal traders into bankable commodity aggregators.
3. Governance, Compliance & Risk Management
As Goldbod strengthens traceability and aggregation controls, CLGB equips members with:
- Compliance frameworks
- Standardised documentation systems
- Responsible sourcing protocols
- AML/CFT alignment
This reduces operational risk while strengthening credibility in domestic and export markets.
4. Aggregation Optimisation
CLGB supports LGBs to operate efficiently within the Goldbod model by:
- Coordinating regional aggregation structures
- Promoting shared logistics efficiencies
- Improving assay, quality control, and reporting standards
- Enhancing digital traceability systems
The result is reduced leakages and improved margins within a compliant ecosystem.
The CLGB Value Proposition to the ASM Sector
- Formalisation with Inclusion
From the Gold Coast era of extraction to modern Ghana’s regulatory maturity, formalisation is no longer optional — it is foundational. CLGB ensures that formalisation under Goldbod does not marginalise ASM actors but integrates them into structured value chains with predictable offtake and fair pricing mechanisms.
2. Price Transparency & Fair Value Realisation
Through organised aggregation and coordinated buyer systems, miners benefit from:
- Transparent pricing benchmarks
- Reduced arbitrage exploitation
- Reliable offtake arrangements
- Faster settlement cycles
This strengthens miner confidence and reduces incentives for illicit trade.
3. Local Value Retention
Ghana’s gold story must increasingly be a Ghanaian wealth story. CLGB champions:
- Indigenous capital participation
- Local enterprise scaling to rival the Anglogold & Newmonts
- Transition of ASM actors into mid-tier players
- Capacity development across the gold value chain
The vision: Ghanaian gold, financed by Ghanaian institutions, traded by Ghanaian enterprises, contributing to Ghana’s development.
4. Institutional Stability in a Reform Era
Major structural reforms, like Goldbod’s aggregation framework, require coordinated implementation. CLGB acts as a stabilising partner — ensuring reforms are efficient, commercially viable, and aligned with market realities.
The Bigger Picture
Formalising ASM is essentially about structuring:
- Informal Capital & Financing
- Informal Trade
- Informal Labour
- Informal Pricing
- Informal Logistics
- Informal Data
- Informal Exports
Under Ghana’s Goldbod reform era, the objective is not to eliminate small-scale actors, but to institutionalise them into a transparent, traceable, and bankable gold value chain.
The transition mirrors Ghana’s broader historical journey — from the unstructured extraction economy of the Gold Coast to a sovereign nation building structured systems around its most iconic resource: gold.
Drawing the Line: Gold Coast → Ghana → Goldbod
- Gold Coast: Recognised globally for abundant gold resources.
- Independence Ghana: Gold becomes central to macroeconomic stability and foreign reserves.
- Modern Ghana under Goldbod: Institutional formalisation of ASM gold trade for transparency, traceability, and national benefit.
CLGB stands at the intersection of history and reform — ensuring that the legacy of gold transitions from colonial extraction to sovereign value creation.
5. The Strategic Commitment
As Ghana marks 69 years of independence, the Chamber of Licensed Gold Buyers affirms:
- Commitment to responsible aggregation
- Commitment to indigenous enterprise growth
- Commitment to policy partnership
- Commitment to financial innovation
- Commitment to transforming ASM into a structured, bankable, and globally respected sector
From the Gold Coast to a regulated gold economy — CLGB is the institutional anchor aligning Licensed Gold Buyers and the ASM ecosystem with Ghana’s next phase of economic sovereignty.
Gold built our name.
Structure will build our future.