
There’s a saying that when the rhythm changes, so must the dance. But in Ghana’s music economy, the rhythm of revenue isn’t just changing — it’s clashing.
On one side, there’s the sleek digital hum of music streaming; on the other, the old-school, stubbornly profitable ring of the caller tune. Both claim to serve the artist — but only one seems to consistently feed them.
And in this case, the wallet speaks louder than the Wi-Fi.
The Numbers Don’t Lie — They Just Confuse You
Let’s crunch the numbers, Ghana style.
A million streams on Spotify brings in roughly $770 to a Ghanaian artist. Yes, seven hundred and seventy dollars. On Apple Music, that same million streams earn around $300. Audiomack does slightly better at $1,000, while Boomplay — the more “Afro-aware” of the bunch — pays around $3,000.
Now, pause and breathe that in.
That’s four different platforms, four different pay scales — and yet, in total, the best-case scenario for a million streams across all platforms might barely crack $5,000. At the current exchange rate, that’s roughly 75,000 Ghana Cedis before any distribution fees, taxes, or label cuts.
Now enter the humble caller tune.
MTN Ghana’s Caller Ring Back Tune (CBR) system pays an estimated ₵260,000 for a million ringtone subscriptions. Of course, that figure gets chopped up like a wedding cake between MTN, its content aggregator, and the artist — with the artist or right holder walking away with just 15% of the total.
But here’s the kicker: that “mere” 15% still equals ₵39,000, or about $2,600.
So while streaming may sound modern, the math says otherwise. Even with the tiny share of CBR revenue that trickles down to artists, that payout often outperforms what the average Ghanaian musician earns from a million Spotify or Apple streams combined.
In short: streaming pays for attention, caller tunes pay for commitment.
The Ghanaian Streaming Struggle
Streaming platforms thrive on stable internet, high data capacity, and a culture of digital consumption — three things Ghana still wrestles with. Data bundles here are not just expensive; they’re rationed like gold dust.
Think about it: to stream an hour of music on Spotify takes roughly 100MB of data. At current MTN or Vodafone rates, that’s several cedis gone — for the listener. For the artist, each of those streams adds up to fractions of a dollar.
Meanwhile, caller tunes require none of that. No Wi-Fi, no buffering, no app download. Just a SIM card and a vibe.
A fan might never touch Spotify but will proudly keep Kidi’s“Touch It” or Stonebwoy’s “Therapy” as their caller tune for months — a small, recurring act of fandom that quietly generates revenue every time someone dials their number.
In Ghana’s current digital terrain, caller tunes aren’t just a relic. They’re a form of offline streaming, one that thrives in the very environment where global platforms falter.
Prestige vs. Paycheck
Of course, let’s not ignore the cool factor. Saying, “My song hit a million streams on Spotify” makes for a great Instagram caption. It attracts brands, bookings, and international curiosity. But the harsh truth? The landlord doesn’t accept prestige as rent.
Streaming success rarely translates into real Ghanaian cedis. It’s more like a résumé builder than a revenue stream. For many artists, digital glory doesn’t equal financial stability — especially when those millions of plays barely cover studio time or promotion.
Caller tunes, on the other hand, are the industry’s unsung heroes. They don’t trend on Twitter, but they pay bills. They don’t win awards, but they quietly sustain livelihoods. The irony is poetic: the older, “outdated” system puts more cash in artists’ pockets than the platforms of the digital future.
The Connectivity Conundrum
Let’s talk infrastructure.
Ghana’s internet penetration keeps growing, but affordability and reliability remain shaky. Streaming assumes constant connectivity, but large portions of the population still rely on WhatsApp voice notes as their main mode of audio sharing.
Meanwhile, caller tunes bypass all those barriers. They’re powered by telco billing — not internet data. As long as you can make a phone call, you can participate in Ghana’s micro-economy of music monetization.
So while streaming platforms cater to global convenience, caller tunes thrive on local reality. It’s not that Ghanaians reject streaming — we simply can’t afford to stream like the West does. Until that changes, telcos will continue to dominate where Spotify struggles to connect.
The Data-Driven Verdict
Let’s put it bluntly:
| Platform | Payout (per 1M streams) | Equivalent in GHS (≈₵15/$) | Practical Accessibility |
| Spotify | $770 | ₵11,550 | Low – data heavy |
| Apple Music | $300 | ₵4,500 | Low – requires subscription |
| Audiomack | $1,000 | ₵15,000 | Medium – ad-supported |
| Boomplay | $3,000 | ₵45,000 | High – local-friendly |
| MTN Caller Tune (15% artist share) | $2,600 (₵39,000) | ₵39,000 | Very high – offline access |
The numbers paint a clear picture: the caller tune remains the most locally profitable per engagement model for Ghanaian artists.
The Way Forward — Hybrid Thinking
Here’s where the real opportunity lies: not in choosing one over the other, but in merging both worlds.
Imagine if:
• Streaming platforms partnered with Ghanaian telcos to create data-free streaming options, like Nigeria has begun experimenting with.
• Artists strategically used caller tunes as promo gateways, encouraging fans to move from ringtone to full stream.
• Local developers built homegrown streaming platformsdesigned around Ghana’s economic and data realities.
The goal isn’t nostalgia versus innovation. It’s about syncing technology with local rhythms. Ghana’s creative economy thrives when it adapts, not when it imitates.
Final Chorus
So, is streaming suitable for Ghana? The answer isn’t a simple yes or no — it’s a “not yet.”
Until streaming platforms become Ghana-friendly in cost, connectivity, and payout, the caller ringback tone will continue to be the unsung hero of the music economy. The flashy digital concerts may draw attention, but the humble ringtone is still quietly paying school fees.
For Ghanaian artists, the smartest play is to dance to both beats — the global and the local, the stream and the ring.
Because in this country, where creativity never sleeps, even when the industry seems out of tune — we always find a way to make the music dance.