Abstract
The performance and strategic orientation of enterprises in Ghana have been persistently shaped by a complex interplay of institutional and market-based structural constraints. These include infrastructural deficits, access to finance limitations, and evolving corporate governance expectations, which collectively influence business models and growth trajectories. This perspective piece aims to critically analyse the dominant structural and governance challenges confronting domestic enterprises, and to propose a forward-looking framework for navigating these constraints to enhance resilience and competitiveness. The analysis employs a longitudinal, multi-level perspective, synthesising insights from business reports, policy documents, and extant literature to construct a coherent narrative on the evolving business environment. A central theme is the critical role of adaptive, hybrid governance models that blend formal oversight with informal relational networks. Notably, enterprises that proactively integrated environmental, social, and governance (ESG) principles into core operations demonstrated a marked improvement in securing long-term investment, with a discernible shift in capital allocation favouring such firms. Structural constraints remain significant, but their impact is mediated by strategic firm-level responses and the gradual maturation of institutional frameworks. The future trajectory hinges on strategic adaptation to these dual forces. Policymakers should prioritise regulatory coherence and incentives for ESG integration. Enterprise leaders are urged to develop embedded governance protocols that leverage both formal and informal institutions for strategic advantage. structural constraints, corporate governance, institutional theory, business environment, strategic adaptation, ESG This paper provides a novel synthesis of structural and governance analysis, introducing the concept of 'embedded hybrid governance' as a critical mechanism for enterprise resilience in emerging African economies.