
In a bold move to address domestic labor surpluses while strengthening South-South relations, Ghana has formalized a landmark bilateral agreement with Jamaica to export skilled nurses and teachers to the Caribbean island.
The agreement was sealed following high-level discussions between Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, and Jamaica’s Senator Kamina Johnson Smith on the margins of the OACPS summit in Brussels, at the end of last week. The initiative builds upon the precedent set by Ghana’s earlier collaboration with Barbados, which saw the successful deployment of hundreds of nurses across the Caribbean.
The new accord is designed to provide a structured and dignified framework for skilled Ghanaian professionals, creating pathways for migration through specialized visas and streamlined accreditation of qualifications. Minister Ablakwa described the partnership as both “mutually beneficial” and a “tribute to our shared cultural lineage,” underscoring the depth of Afro-Caribbean solidarity. With Jamaica facing acute shortages in healthcare and education sectors, the move promises to alleviate workforce gaps while offering Ghanaian professionals internationally benchmarked remuneration packages and enhanced career mobility.
This partnership also responds directly to Ghana’s mounting unemployment among trained professionals. With approximately 55,000 nurses and 20,000 teachers graduating annually, yet only a fraction absorbed by the domestic public sector, the agreement offers both economic relief and opportunity. Analysts estimate the pact could generate up to $75 million annually in remittances, positioning Jamaica as a viable destination beyond the traditional migration corridors of the UK and US, and signaling a maturing phase in Ghana’s strategic labor export policy.