The National Information Technology Authority Bill is Ghana’s new bill to regulate the technology and digital services sector.
It seeks to replace or update the earlier NITA framework under the National Information Technology Agency Act, 2008, and gives NITA broader powers as a regulator of ICT businesses, digital service providers, ICT professionals, public-sector technology projects, and digital infrastructure.
What the Bill says
The Bill gives NITA stronger authority to regulate Ghana’s ICT and digital technology space. It covers areas such as licensing of ICT service providers, certification of ICT professionals, technical standards, ICT procurement, digital infrastructure, data systems, compliance monitoring, and regulatory enforcement.
One of the most debated provisions is the requirement for ICT businesses and service providers to be licensed. This could affect software companies, fintechs, cloud service providers, data centres, digital platforms, ICT contractors, and other technology-related businesses.
The Bill also gives NITA the power to certify ICT professionals before they can work in certain public or private institutions.
Supporters say this will improve standards and professionalism in the sector. Critics argue that it could create barriers for self-taught developers, young innovators, freelancers, and startups.
It also empowers NITA to maintain a register of ICT providers, monitor compliance, issue directives, suspend or revoke licences, and enforce standards across the sector.
Position of the Communications Minister
The Minister for Communication, Digital Technology, and Innovations, Samuel Nartey George, has defended NITA’s regulatory enforcement. His position is that NITA is not acting arbitrarily, but within the legal framework approved by Parliament and existing ICT laws.
He argues that the enforcement of registration fees, certification requirements, and compliance obligations is necessary to bring order, accountability, and “sanity” into Ghana’s fast-growing technology ecosystem.
According to the Minister, proper regulation is needed to protect consumers, improve standards, strengthen digital trust, and ensure that technology companies operating in Ghana meet basic legal and professional requirements.
The stance of tech people and critics
Many tech professionals, startup founders, and digital rights advocates remain strongly opposed to parts of the Bill. Their main concern is that it could give NITA too much control over who can operate in Ghana’s digital economy.
Critics argue that mandatory licensing and certification could discourage innovation, increase the cost of doing business, and hurt young people trying to build careers in technology. They say Ghana’s tech ecosystem has grown because developers, startups, and digital entrepreneurs have been able to experiment, build products, and enter the market without excessive state control.
Bright Simons and other critics argue that while Ghana needs standards, interoperability, and accountability in the digital sector, the law risks becoming too broad and restrictive. They fear it could turn NITA into a gatekeeper over innovation rather than a facilitator of digital growth.
Bottom line
The NITA Bill, has become one of the most controversial technology laws in Ghana. The government says it is needed to regulate the digital economy, protect consumers, and improve professional standards.
But many in the tech community say the Act could overregulate the sector, punish young innovators, and slow down Ghana’s digital transformation.
































