Gold Fields Remits GH₵5.77 Billion to Government, Reinforcing Role as Key Contributor to Ghana’s Economy
Gold Fields Ghana has solidified its status as one of the country’s largest corporate revenue contributors, remitting over GH₵5.77 billion to the Government of Ghana in 2025 alone, according to the company’s latest disclosure under the “publish what you pay” framework.
The mining giant, which operates the Tarkwa and Damang mines in the Western Region, highlighted that its fiscal contributions extend beyond corporate income taxes to royalties, dividends, PAYE remittances, withholding taxes, and VAT, illustrating the multi-layered economic value generated by its operations.
Corporate taxes and royalties dominate fiscal contributions
Corporate taxes formed the largest share, totalling GH₵2.9 billion, with Tarkwa accounting for GH₵2.5 billion and Damang GH₵338.9 million. Royalties contributed GH₵1.2 billion, while dividends to the state reached GH₵705.1 million. Withholding taxes stood at GH₵453 million, PAYE remittances at GH₵311.3 million, and withholding VAT at GH₵207.3 million.
The scale of these payments underscores Gold Fields’ role in bolstering domestic revenue, supporting fiscal consolidation, and reducing reliance on external borrowing.
Local procurement and enterprise growth
Beyond direct fiscal contributions, Gold Fields invested GH₵8.8 billion in local procurement in 2025. Of this, GH₵6.5 billion was allocated to 163 suppliers from host communities around Tarkwa and Damang, supporting small and medium-sized enterprises and creating thousands of indirect jobs across logistics, engineering, catering, security, and civil works.
Employment and community impact
Seventy percent of Gold Fields’ workforce is drawn from host communities, ensuring that income remains within surrounding towns and districts. The GH₵311.3 million in PAYE remittances reflects the scale of employment, with wages feeding into local consumption, real estate, education, and financial services.
In addition, the company invested GH₵61.75 million in socio-economic development initiatives, spanning education, healthcare, infrastructure, water and sanitation, and livelihood programs. These projects demonstrate Gold Fields’ commitment to long-term community development and alignment with Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) principles.
Strategic significance for Ghana
At the national level, Gold Fields’ operations support foreign exchange earnings, strengthen export receipts, and reinforce the stability of the cedi. When combined with local procurement, the company’s 2025 economic footprint exceeds GH₵14 billion, reflecting both direct and indirect contributions to Ghana’s industrialisation and economic transformation efforts.
Gold Fields’ management emphasised that the figures reflect sustained investment at Tarkwa and Damang, highlighting the strategic role of responsible mining in driving national growth, employment, enterprise development, and community well-being.
The disclosure under the “publish what you pay” initiative further reinforces transparency and accountability in the extractive sector, providing a benchmark for the contribution of large-scale mining to Ghana’s socio-economic development.
