Socioeconomic Impact of Cloud Computing and ICT Interventions in Ghana’s Digital Economy
Authors
Gdirst Institute (Ghana)
Gdirst Institute (Ghana)
National Communications Authority (Ghana)
Gdirst Institute (Ghana)
National Communications Authority (Ghana)
Article Information
DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.10100095
Subject Category: Information Technology
Volume/Issue: 10/1 | Page No: 1163-1184
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-01-01
Accepted: 2026-01-07
Published: 2026-01-23
Abstract
Cloud computing and broader ICT interventions have become key enablers of Ghana’s digital transformation agenda, shaping how public services are delivered, how firms compete, and how citizens participate in economic and social life. Yet, while technical and regulatory analyses of Ghana’s digital ecosystem are growing, there is comparatively less synthesis of the socioeconomic impacts associated with cloud and related digital infrastructure. This paper examines the socioeconomic implications of cloud computing and ICT interventions in Ghana’s digital economy using secondary data drawn from official statistics, policy documents, multilateral diagnostics, and peer-reviewed studies.
The analysis adopts a structured framework that links cloud and ICT capabilities to four impact domains: (1) productivity and firm performance; (2) financial inclusion and digital financial services; (3) public service delivery and human capital development; and (4) employment, skills, and regional inclusion. Within each domain, the paper combines Ghana-specific indicators and case examples with comparative regional evidence to assess how cloud-enabled platforms, data centres, connectivity investments, and digital public infrastructure are influencing economic opportunity and inequality.
The findings suggest that cloud and ICT interventions have contributed to measurable gains in financial inclusion, the expansion of digital services, and the emergence of new ICT-intensive business models, while also exposing persistent gaps in skills, infrastructure, and institutional capacity. The paper argues that realising the full development potential of cloud computing in Ghana requires deliberate policies to address spatial and social inequalities in access, strengthen complementary capabilities in skills and organisational readiness, and align cloud adoption with national development priorities. The study concludes by outlining a research agenda for mixed-method and longitudinal work on cloud-enabled development outcomes in Ghana and comparable African economies.
Keywords
ICT intervenstions, cloud computing, socioeconomic impact, Ghana, human capital development
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References
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