By Adnan Adams Mohammed
At Ghana’s bustling maritime gateways, a silent, invisible revolution is unfolding. It doesn’t carry a badge or walk the docks, but it has managed to do what decades of manual inspections could not: pinpoint a staggering GH¢11 billion in hidden revenue leakages.
The tool at the heart of this transformation is the ‘Publican’ AI system. While its deployment by the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) has been hailed as a masterstroke in fiscal recovery, it has simultaneously become a lightning rod for a national debate involving the Ministry of Finance, parliamentary watchdogs, and trade unions.
This is the analytical inside story of how Ghana is attempting to digitize its borders—and the friction that comes with it.
The GH¢11 billion revelation
The headline figure that has stopped the nation in its tracks is GH¢11 billion. This is the amount the GRA credits the Publican AI with exposing through “suspicious transactions.”
For years, the ports were plagued by a phenomenon known as “value gap” or under-invoicing where importers declare the value of a luxury SUV as that of a salvaged sedan, or a shipment of high-end electronics as mere plastic parts. By utilizing global price benchmarking and real-time data analytics, Publican stripped away the anonymity of these transactions.
“The AI system is a game-changer,” says Anthony Kwasi Sarpong, the Commissioner-General of the GRA. “It isn’t just about finding mistakes; it’s about identifying deliberate patterns of tax evasion that have drained the national purse for years.”
Efficiency vs. friction: The speed debate
Perhaps the most persistent criticism from the trading community specifically clearing agents was that adding a layer of AI analysis would “choke” the flow of goods, turning Tema and Takoradi into digital parking lots.
However, the GRA has countered this with data of its own. The Authority maintains that Publican is actually speeding up trade. By acting as a sophisticated filter, the AI instantly clears “low-risk” cargo from compliant importers who have a history of honest declarations.
“In the past, we had to slow everyone down to catch a few bad actors,” a senior customs official explained. “Now, the AI flags the 10% that are suspicious, allowing the other 90% to move through the gates faster than ever.”
The question of sovereignty: Who makes the final call?
A major point of analytical tension has been the fear of “Algorithm Governance” the idea that a machine might be unilaterally deciding how much a Ghanaian business owes in taxes.
The GRA and the Ministry of Finance have been careful to clarify the AI’s mandate. The system is a “whistleblower,” not a “judge.” It does not determine the final customs value; instead, it generates a “red flag” when a declaration deviates significantly from global market norms.
The final assessment remains in human hands. This “human-in-the-loop” architecture is designed to prevent technical glitches from causing financial ruin for importers, while still providing customs officers with the data-driven “ammunition” they need to challenge suspicious claims.
Political heat and the “Truedare” controversy
Despite the economic wins, the rollout has faced intense political scrutiny. Joseph Cudjoe, the Minister for Public Enterprises, recently raised alarms regarding potential revenue losses and the structure of the deal involving the AI’s parent company, Truedare.
Cudjoe’s concerns center on the “cost-benefit” of the contract—specifically whether the fees paid to the technology providers might offset the gains made in revenue recovery. His “alarm” serves as a reminder that in the world of government procurement, even the most efficient technology must pass the test of transparency and value for money.
The Ministry of Finance, however, has stood firmly behind the project. In a recent defense, the Ministry argued that the GH¢11 billion identified far outweighs any operational costs and that the system is essential for the nation’s survival under current global economic pressures.
Stakeholder evolution: The IEAG turnaround
One of the most telling signs of the system’s viability is the shifting stance of the Importers and Exporters Association of Ghana (IEAG). Initially skeptical and vocal about their concerns, the association has recently moved to back the Publican system.
This endorsement came only after the GRA and the technology providers addressed specific “pain points” regarding user interface and the speed of the flagging process. The IEAG’s support suggests that the private sector is willing to accept AI oversight—provided it remains fair, predictable, and transparent.
The road ahead: A digital frontier
As Ghana continues to grapple with debt and the need for domestic revenue mobilization, the “Publican” experiment is more than just a software rollout; it is a test case for the continent.
The analytical reality is that the GH¢11 billion recovered is only the beginning. The real victory for the GRA will be “behavioral change”—a future where importers stop attempting to cheat the system because they know a tireless, 24/7 digital eye is watching every invoice.
For now, the silicon gatekeeper remains at its post. The debate over its cost and its “intelligence” will likely continue in the halls of Parliament, but at the ports, the numbers speak for themselves. The machine has found the money; now, the state must ensure it keeps it.
