Ghana's "Busy Ants" issue belongs to a broader wave of African wildlife-themed bullion coinage that the Bank of Ghana has developed since the late 2010s, partly to capture premium collector markets in Europe and North America where demand for exotic-jurisdiction silver has grown steadily. The 2022 date places it squarely in a period when Ghana was navigating a severe currency crisis — the cedi lost roughly half its value against the dollar that year — making the foreign-exchange revenue from export-oriented numismatic silver genuinely meaningful to the issuing authority.
Ghana's "Busy Ants" issue belongs to a broader wave of African wildlife-themed bullion coinage that the Bank of Ghana has developed since the late 2010s, partly to capture premium collector markets in Europe and North America where demand for exotic-jurisdiction silver has grown steadily. The 2022 date places it squarely in a period when Ghana was navigating a severe currency crisis — the cedi lost roughly half its value against the dollar that year — making the foreign-exchange revenue from export-oriented numismatic silver genuinely meaningful to the issuing authority.