Health has been declared the starting point for Africa’s ambitious reset, a move unveiled by President John Dramani Mahama at the launch of the Accra Reset initiative on the sidelines of the 80th United Nations General Assembly in New York.
The initiative, themed “Accra Reset: Reimagining Global Governance for Health and Development”, positions health as the most aid-dependent sector but also as the ideal space for demonstrating sovereignty-driven models of progress.
President Mahama emphasized that outdated global governance frameworks have failed to adequately protect vulnerable populations, making Africa’s self-led development imperative.
Ghana has already taken concrete steps, including passing the Ghana Medical Trust Fund Act, establishing a National Vaccine Institute with GHS 75 million in seed funding, and preparing to roll out free primary health care nationwide.
At the continental level, institutions such as the Africa CDC and the African Medicines Agency reflect Africa’s ability to pioneer sustainable, homegrown solutions.
President Mahama further revealed that African development finance institutions and private banks have pledged over $1 billion in support of reset-compatible initiatives.
Tools like the Health Investor Multiplier, Synergy Tools, and blended finance deal rooms, alongside innovation platforms such as Panerbios, Proxpa, and the AfCFTA Hub, are set to operationalize these investments.
“But health is only the beginning. Africa is only our starting point. The reset looks beyond today’s crisis and identifies new pivots of growth—biodiversity, climate resilience, nutrition, and empowerment economies. These are trillion-dollar opportunities for inclusive prosperity,” he said.
The Accra Reset marks a bold attempt to shift Africa toward self-reliance, innovation, and inclusive development, beginning with the sector that directly impacts the well-being and productivity of its citizens.