Close Menu
NewsFile GH
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Showbiz
  • Odd News
  • Opinion
What's Hot

The agenda to weaken NPP as a political force will fail – Afenyo-Markin

Minority condemns arrest of Kofi Jumah by EOCO

Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • The agenda to weaken NPP as a political force will fail – Afenyo-Markin
  • Minority condemns arrest of Kofi Jumah by EOCO
  • Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge
  • Robert Mugabe’s son to be deported from South Africa over firearms offence
  • UCC lecturer & TA who graduated as best student last year killed in motor accident
  • GFA sets September 4 for start of next season
  • rCOMSDEP engages N/R Minister on small-scale miners registration drive
  • STMA highlights funding constraints, demands Sanitation Courts during Parliamentary Oversight visit
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
NewsFile GH
Demo
  • Home
  • Local News

    STMA highlights funding constraints, demands Sanitation Courts during Parliamentary Oversight visit

    April 29, 2026

    Galamsey: Christian Council rallies Ghanaians ahead of programme launch

    April 28, 2026

    Ghanaians in Pretoria advised to take precautionary measures amid anti- immigration protests

    April 28, 2026

    Jailbreak in Adabraka; three re-arrested

    April 27, 2026

    Parliamentary Committee discovers Zoomlion operated nine extra waste containers free in Cape Coast

    April 27, 2026
  • Politics

    The agenda to weaken NPP as a political force will fail – Afenyo-Markin

    April 29, 2026

    Minority condemns arrest of Kofi Jumah by EOCO

    April 29, 2026

    APL survey: Asiedu Nketia narrowly leads Julius Debrah in NDC 2028 race

    April 21, 2026

    NPP Bono Region Chairman Abronye flown abroad for ‘urgent’ medical care

    April 18, 2026

    Former NPP MP Paul Twum-Barimah defends High Court ruling on OSP powers

    April 17, 2026
  • Business

    rCOMSDEP training for cooperative groups begins in Ellembelle

    April 28, 2026

    GRIDCo boss asked to step aside over probe into fire at Akosombo

    April 26, 2026

    No contractor owed a pesewa on Big Push projects – Agbodza

    April 24, 2026

    Fire at GRIDCo’s Akosombo substation leaves parts of country without power

    April 23, 2026

    Ghana risks losing up to $2 bn if power outages persist, warns ASEC

    April 23, 2026
  • Sports

    GFA sets September 4 for start of next season

    April 29, 2026

    Ten ‘sins’ Carlos Queiroz needs no repeating as Black Stars coach

    April 27, 2026

    Carlos Queiroz outdoored

    April 23, 2026

    Asante Kotoko’s interim coach Yaw Owusu resigns after barely two months

    April 21, 2026

    New Black Stars coach Carlos Queiroz arrives on Thursday for unveiling

    April 20, 2026
  • Showbiz

    Kwahu Easter a national tourism asset that needs infrastructure support – Mpraeso MP

    March 27, 2026

    Gyankroma Akufo-Addo denies $25m interchange painting claims; threatens legal action

    March 27, 2026

    OnlyFans owner Leonid Radvinsky dies at 43

    March 23, 2026

    Liizzy Gordon sings about the Blood of Jesus

    March 23, 2026

    Medikal vows to make an impact with ‘Red Means Stop’ campaign

    March 13, 2026
  • Odd News

    Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge

    April 29, 2026

    We had sex in a Chinese hotel, then found we had been broadcast to thousands

    February 6, 2026

    Nsawam Female Prison inmates showcase talents, proving rehabilitation thrives through discipline, culture and self-expression

    January 6, 2026

    Drunk raccoon found passed out on liquor store floor after breaking in

    December 3, 2025

    Search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 missing in 2014 to resume

    December 3, 2025
  • Opinion

    Tithing Wahala: The Methodist Church’s ‘Robbers’ & the ‘Brave’ Woman – My Judgement!

    April 28, 2026

    Ten ‘sins’ Carlos Queiroz needs no repeating as Black Stars coach

    April 27, 2026

    Stop blaming the Banku. . .are we eating wrong or just living wrong?

    April 27, 2026

    My eight True Dare: ICUMS vs Truedare – Why is Truedare more expensive than ICUMS?

    April 23, 2026

    Ghana’s Investment Revolution: Open for business, protected for citizens

    April 20, 2026
NewsFile GH
Home»Business»What Cheddar’s ‘scraps to riches’ story says about Ghana
Business

What Cheddar’s ‘scraps to riches’ story says about Ghana

By newsfileghJanuary 19, 20248 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp Telegram Copy Link
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link Email

This morning, your dutiful writer got a message from a notable Ghanaian journalist about Cheddar’s “scraps to riches” story about the origin of his wealth.

If you are Ghanaian, you must have heard of Cheddar by now, unless you have been living under a rock. He is a flashy real estate tycoon who has in recent days sucked all the oxygen from the room after announcing that he is the “man in the mask“, a mysterious billboard figure with echoes of V for Vendetta.

Upon unveiling himself, he said the mask signifies the ancestors, solidarity, and the importance of putting the “message above the messenger”. And, just to be clear, he is running for President.

Image Source: Semafor

Given his flamboyance and esoteric wealth displays, the source of his fortune quickly became a talking point. The airwaves, the gossip blogs, the tabloids, and every social media corner got flooded with opinions, debates and the occasional fistfight.

That’s where the “scrap” comes in. Cheddar says he made his first million pounds selling discarded metal junk on the streets of London at age 21 from his flat in Walthamstow. He had two employees who lugged the stuff around and brought in the trade. 

Much fun has been added to the drab election season. Too many of the same old faces have been shoved into our Ghanaian spaces wearing the same plastic smiles for too long. Some levity and vivacity were clearly overdue. However the message from the aforementioned notable journalist also raised issues about whether Ghana was becoming an unserious society. This is a country that is after all in the midst of an IMF bailout program after one of the most catastrophic economic crises in a generation. Should the serious business of electing the next President be reduced to pantomime?

My own view is that if there is any unseriousness, it is not Cheddar who is injecting it into our bloodstream. Your dutiful writer spends all his non-job hours researching and writing about heavy stuff, stuff no one being fair can call unserious. Maybe overwrought, overearnest and longwinded, but, surely, not unserious? IMF, SML, Agyapa, Kelni GVG, CDB loan, China Hassan, lithium, STX, Bailout, pick your choice. 

Rest assured, dear reader, in this author’s experience, there isn’t that much of a difference in Ghana between the so-called elite, the serious people, on the one hand, and the ordinary masses, on the other hand, when it comes to willingness to sacrifice time and leisure to really grasp the “facts”, “policies” and “serious information” about the country’s predicament. With the exception of a very tiny maverick cohort, elite Ghanaians are just as comfortable with the surface news, neon headlines, and nuggets of gossip as everyone else. You may say that this is due to the bad writing and boring style of authors like yours truly, but can you point to many successful counterpoints of hard facts getting a serious hearing in contemporary Ghana?

If you attempt to create the Ghanaian version of Foreign Affairs, Caijing, Foreign Policy, Caravan, Atlantic, or the London Review of Books, you will read it yourself. You and your crew of a few dozen mavericks. Not to embarrass many eminent people, we should refrain from citing examples, but Ghana abounds in graveyards of all manner of projects that sought to test this truth. 

In this author’s 17 years of public policy activism, he has learnt the hard way that the number of Ghanaians who really care about rigorous facts, “truth value“, “policy detail” and “more than surface insight” to spend precious time on them, to support their production, or to create communities willing to use them for real-world effect are far too few and far between to form a critical mass that can impact the culture of conversation in anyway. That is just a blatant fact. Cheddar’s presence doesn’t affect this reality in any way. Only ideological tenacity makes some like this author persist.

Cheddar’s political progress, if any, will be shaped by his ability to emotively connect on the surface, and either find a way to mobilise organic social bases like ethnic groups and religious communities, or to activate a fast growing, but still politically insignificant, young voter population that has a very limited interest in politics and is concerned solely with hacking the system as it exists. Hacking it, so to speak, by using new tools like betting, crypto, remote work, japa, and MLM. That latter voting bloc is not looking for revolution, just inspiration to “make it”. They are not tickled by facts and figures any more than their social betters are. This is just the bitter truth. 

The raw and stomach-churning reality that elites in Ghana refuse to confront is that the country has spawned a low-information society where the middle classes simply do not play the role they do elsewhere. They do not sacrifice their time, energy, leisure and intellect for civic causes. They will do so for business, ethnic/chieftaincy, religion, alumni groups, hobby groups, and even sports, endurance, and adventure clubs, but never for civic causes. Things related to public policy, environmental activism, ideological movements and the like simply don’t fall within the range of consciousness of the Ghanaian middle class. Yes, there are the occasional sparks, but they never light a fire bright enough or for long enough to attract enough people to build any durable civic movements. 

Some will say that these are just the products of a low-income environment, but that won’t be very accurate. India, parts of Latin America, and pre-Erdogan Turkey are examples of “low-income” societies that nevertheless experienced civic consciousness blooms and intense, as well as penetrating, public square cultures well before attaining middle-income economic status.

In the Ghana of today, however, civic matters do not attract enough scrutiny for facts to matter too much. People form a quick impression and move on. This is exactly what has happened in the “scraps to riches” affair. 

Admittedly, the issue of Cheddar’s wealth or lack of wealth is not a policy issue. He himself says that it is no one’s business. Enthusiasts of clean politics who would love for “unexplained wealth orders” to be used more liberally in the fight against political corruption are aghast. Tomes can be written about the cracks and nuances of this debate. But considering the sheer level of attention the scrap issue has received, one would have expected that there would have been, at least, a certain strata of the public square where serious people will want the hard facts, or something as close to it as possible. And that there would have been those willing and able to supply. Like all that energy serious American commentators and researchers have expended on unpacking Trump’s business affairs, even after he got into office.

On the specific issue of scrap, everyone knows, for example, that in the UK, one cannot deal in scrap without a license. Here is a snapshot of the 1964 scrap dealers law:

Scrap-dealing is such a regulated industry that the government amended the law in 2013 to further tighten various provisions:

One cannot legally deal in scrap metal without a license or a permit in the UK. It has been so for a considerable length of time. And the licensing is not cheap. Fees are set by local authorities with some guidance from the central government. Each local authority also maintains a register of both applicants and licensees. During the design of the latest regulations, preparatory work involved an economic assessment of the impact of regulatory compliance on scrap dealers in the UK. It was found that the cost of compliance for each subject entity exceeds £4 million.

In short, it is easy for anyone really interested because they think Ghana must prevent a shady character from becoming President to follow the path of inquiry hinted above to determine if Cheddar’s “scraps to riches” story is true. If getting to the bottom of this affair is of such public interest, given how much attention it has garnered, why hasn’t anyone done it yet? Instead of following the Ghanaian public square conversation format of “everything is debatable”, why isn’t there a layer of commentary where the truly serious middle class can turn to for the “hard facts”? 

Of course, every society has a conspiracy fringe where mainstream facts will never wash. There is no dispute about that. But every serious society also has a layer for authoritative information. Does Ghana at this point? That, as far as this author is concerned, is the question.

Some readers will feel cheated at this stage because they started reading with the expectation that the essay will proceed to answer the question of whether Cheddar made his money from scrap or not. But such readers have not been paying attention. The POINT of this brief essay is to show that it can be done authoritatively and presented in a well-researched, maybe 3000-word, essay (showing the full train of reasoning and analysis so that serious people can follow to their satisfaction). AND THE VAST MAJORITY OF THOSE TALKING ABOUT THE ISSUE TODAY WILL NOT READ OR ENGAGE WITH THE MATERIAL. In short, it will be POINTLESS. With no bearing on the public conversation at any level that another surface-level soundbite won’t completely eclipse. Someone can try though. 

Whilst this author took the message sent to him by that respected journalist seriously, his attitude to this whole controversy is that it misses the point about the true state of citizenship in Ghana today, which is by far the more important issue.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link WhatsApp

Related Posts

iShowSpeed wraps African tour, calls experience “Life-Changing”

January 28, 2026By Fiifi Sey1 Min Read

Ghana, China sign tourism and culture partnership under 24-Hour Economy agenda

January 21, 2026By Fiifi Sey1 Min Read

IMANI’s Bright Simons questions efficiency, transparency of Gold Board model amid policy defence

January 3, 2026By newsfilegh4 Mins Read
Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Recent Posts
  • The agenda to weaken NPP as a political force will fail – Afenyo-Markin
  • Minority condemns arrest of Kofi Jumah by EOCO
  • Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge
  • Robert Mugabe’s son to be deported from South Africa over firearms offence
  • UCC lecturer & TA who graduated as best student last year killed in motor accident
  • GFA sets September 4 for start of next season
Top Posts

The agenda to weaken NPP as a political force will fail – Afenyo-Markin

Minority condemns arrest of Kofi Jumah by EOCO

Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge

Robert Mugabe’s son to be deported from South Africa over firearms offence

About Us
About Us

NewsFile Gh is a comprehensive news portal that delivers up-to-date information on a wide range of topics, including politics, business, sports, entertainment etc. It provides users with real-time news updates accessible anytime and anywhere...

Email Us: news@newsfilegh.com

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube RSS
Recent

The agenda to weaken NPP as a political force will fail – Afenyo-Markin

Minority condemns arrest of Kofi Jumah by EOCO

Stranded whale ferried out of German waters in barge

Most Popular

IS leader in Afghanistan ‘killed’

July 11, 2015

‘Oldest’ Koran found at UK university

July 22, 2015

Gunman in Mahama’s church for court today

July 28, 2015
© 2026 NewsFile GH. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • Politics

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.