Reindorf Baah Perbi | Professionalism and Integrity Exemplified

INTRODUCTION

This instalment in the 50 Inspiring Living Leaders series had to be completed by the end of April 2025 to coincide with the seventy-fifth birthday of an African colossus in the finance world, Reindorf Kofi Baah Perbi. In the interest of full disclosure, this retired deputy Senior Partner of one of the ‘big four’ global accounting firms in Ghana, KPMG, is my own biological father. If it is true that “Success is having people who know you best, love and respect you the most, then I dare say this is a success story. 

‘RBP’ or ‘Uncle Perbs’, as he is affectionately called, is a Fellow of the Association of Certified Chartered Accountants globally as well as a Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants Ghana locally. Because of the integrity with which Reindorf Perbi has lived and led as a finance professional with significant impact in several spheres of life over the last seven decades, his progenies have been honoured to put the name “Perbi” on their family charity (Perbi Family Foundation), executive leadership education consultancy (Perbi Executive Leadership Education–PELÉ), media company (Perbi Paradigms) and on their education technology establishment that has served nearly 20,000 children across the length and breadth of Ghana, Perbi Cubs.

GROWTH

Born Aloft

In the year 1950 in the Gold Coast—as colonial Ghana was called—when the shriek of a baby boy pierced the quiet, dew-saturated and cold morning in April atop the Akuapem mountains of the eastern regions of this British territory, little did the indigenes of Mampong know what sort of Ɔdehye (royal) had been born. It was a Friday, and he was appropriately called “Kofi,” the Akan name given to such Friday-born boys, like Kofi Annan, the late United Nations Secretary-General, who was also an April-born; only a dozen years earlier and in the Asante capital of Kumasi. 

Kofi would later be formally christened Reindorf Baah Perbi by his Methodist goldsmith and bar-owner father, Robert Kofi Perbi, and his farmer-mother Florence Asamoabea. ‘Baah’ because he was named after his paternal grandfather who bore that name. His given German name, Reindorf, is said to have been taken from a certain ‘Doctor Reindorf’ whose name (and maybe deeds?) the baby’s father apparently fancied a lot. He was the third of eight children, all from the same pair of biological parents except for the eldest who was of a different mother.

Early Education

Reindorf Baah Perbi attended the local Presbyterian primary school until he qualified for Adisadel College in Cape Coast, an all-boys secondary school established by the Anglicans in 1910, four clear decades before the young Perbi was born. In those days, that was quite a trek from the Eastern to the Central Region of newly-liberated Ghana.

Neat, orderly and principled, Reindorf won the affection of his friends and teachers alike. It was at Adisadel that Reindorf sat for both his Ordinary and Advanced Level certificate examinations. He became Head Prefect in 1969. The Chapel Prefect in that leadership cohort, Sir Sam Jonah, would later become a lifelong friend and CEO of Ashanti Goldfields, listing it on the New York Stock Exchange.

Reindorf’s maternal uncle took particular notice of his potential and would invite him to spend his vacations with him wherever he was stationed in the country as a bookshop manager of the Methodist Book Depot. R.B. got admitted to study Mathematics in Sixth Form and at the University of Ghana, Legon, a move that took him off his innate desire to pursue Medicine. He had also developed a passion to be a teacher, and he surmised any degree would qualify him. Later, he would get to vicariously live the doctor dream through his firstborn son, Dr. Yaw Perbi.

Due to unforeseen difficulties with the Mathematics course at Legon, Reindorf later had to backpedal from that and head to the School of Administration to pursue accounting. That would turn out to be his true calling—for the rest of his life.

Cementing the Calling

After graduating from the University of Ghana with a Bachelor of Science (Hons) Admin., R.B. would later deepen his professional credentials by qualifying as a chartered accountant (ACCA) and put the icing of a number of certificates and diplomas: Post-graduate Diploma in Industrial Management (Finance) from the Research Institute for Management Science, Delft, in the Netherlands; Accounting Software Systems (Notely Cahill Systems, Ireland); Management Development (Centre for Management Development, Lagos Nigeria); Leadership Training (Haggai Institute for Advanced Leadership Training, Singapore); Plant Based Nutrition (T. Colin Campbell Foundation, Cornell University, USA); KPMG Partners Development Program (Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, South Africa); and a Regional Course on US Government Auditing.

Spiritual Formation and Fervency

Although the Akuapem region is dominated by the Presbyterians—thanks to the Basel missionaries incredible work of evangelizing the mountains and settling there due to the coolness of the weather and minimal mosquito presence that the high altitude blessed it with—this particular Perbi family in Mampong was Methodist in persuasion. So here was Reindorf, born Methodist, elementary-schooled Presbyterian and secondary-schooled Anglican. How ecumenical!

Reindorf’s father was an active member of the local Methodist church, and especially active in the Singing Band. He was a nominal Christian though as evidenced in his running a brisk beer bar  business (drinking spot). During his secondary school days, Kofi Baah trekked all the way to Tamale in Northern Ghana as a 15-year old to a Scripture Union vacation camp where he had a special spiritual encounter with the Lord Jesus Christ that would change his life forever. With evangelistic fervor, he would begin to challenge and change things in his family and later marry a lady who had had a similar high school spiritual encounter through the same ministry of Scripture Union. R.B. would later become the President of the University Christian Fellowship with his would-be wife as President of the fellowship’s branch in her campus hostel of residence, Volta Hall.

Cutting His Teeth in the World of Work

Reindorf’s first job out of university was his National Service at the Accra Polytechnic from 1973 to 1974 where he undertook teaching and researching for a Technical Education Books Project. Then for the next three years (1974-1977), he worked in accounting at Peat Marwick Cassleton Elliot & Co. (what would later evolve into KPMG) as a Trainee Accountant responsible for performing audits and internal control reviews for several client firms.

From those humble beginnings, R.B. rose to become Chief Accountant at the Social Security Bank Ltd. (now Societé Generale) from 1977 to 1985, with accounting and treasury functions, financial administration of the bank involving managing the production of periodic reports for management information, as well as for the Board and annually for shareholders, serving on Finance and House Committees. He was  directly in charge of the Accounts Department, Stores and Warehouse and Procurement; assisting in evaluating applications for medium and long term financing. This would land him in the most epic of professional and national crises.

SUCCESS

A Test of Tests in Integrity

Speaking of RBP as ‘Integrity Exemplified’ always takes one back to a Social Security Bank (SSB) experience where as Chief Accountant some of his staff misconducted themselves, including forging his signature on several payment vouchers to defraud the bank. One of the conspirators was a businessman. When the truth finally surfaced, they were convicted and sentenced to death by a Tribunal. Shortly after, they were killed by firing squad in 1985.

Integrity pays, even to the extent of saving one from the jaws of death itself! In appreciation of Dad’s exemplary integrity about eight years ago, I penned and published the following around Father’s Day 2017: 

“If there ever was a man of integrity I could vouch for it is my father: Reindorf Kofi Baah Perbi. In fact, even way back in the 1980s during his days as Chief Accountant at the then Social Security Bank (now SG-SSB), when his signature was forged and monies stolen it was his integrity that saved him. Everyone vouched for him: “Chief would never do such a thing,” they convincingly told the authorities.

“Those were the heady days of revolution and military rule in Ghana so he had even received a pre-judicial slap or two already when he was picked up by soldiers and sent to Gondar Barracks. After several weeks of tribunal hearings (and I remember us going to fetch him from tribunal hearings after we had been picked up from Ridge Church School), eventually, the perpetrators were found, tried and shot via firing squad. It was no joke. One of them, I believe, is still on the run—he must be still running now or dead from running.”

Illustrious Career at KPMG

Reindorf Perbi rose to become Deputy Senior Partner of KPMG Ghana, having been admitted as a partner in 1988. Previously Head of Audit for many years during which he was Engagement Partner for a number of KPMG clients (some of which will soon be listed) but in his last years he was in charge of Quality & Risk Management, and HR & Training. 

In 2003, he was appointed Head of Assurance for KPMG West Africa cluster and represented the region in many KPMG Africa meetings. In a previous capacity as Partner in charge of Advisory Services with KPMG Ghana, he was involved in a number of assignments in the parastatal sector, including:

  • Conducting financial information study for Ghana Civil Aviation Authority (funded by the World Bank),
  • Team member in charge of finance for USAID funded Government of Ghana Primary Education Project (PREP) which was to grant funding as well as to assess capacity of the Ministry of Education in managing funds,
  • Assisting in organisational restructuring and design of accounting manual and management information systems,
  • Advising, as Liaison Partner, on the design, development, selection and implementation of a computer-based mortgage accounting system.
Diverse Industries, Same Integrity

A survey of RB’s consulting and auditing experience reveals a wide range of industries—petroleum, mining, financial, manufacturing, service, construction, transportation (including shipping), telecommunications—touching on public and private sectors alike. Taking Government, for example, he was the Co-ordinating financial consultant for Stabex 1991, Urban II & III, and Small Holder Rehabilitation Project (IFAD funded) for the Ministry of Agriculture as well as Finance consultant for USAID-funded Ministry of Education Primary Education Project (PREP). He was responsible for providing overall quality, reviewing of financial statements and management letters and authorising the release of the audit report of the Local Government Development Project (Urban III). Then there was the financial audit of the Urban Transport Project. Also a key Ministry of Health project.

Regarding the private sector, Reindorf was the Engagement Partner for Shell Ghana Limited, Total Petroleum Ghana Limited and previously Mobil Oil Ghana Limited. In fact, for thirteen years (1994-2007) he led the strategy, planning and supervising of field work plus preparation, supervision and review of financial statements and reports. This was for the separate companies till their merger in October 2006. RB also served for three (3) years as Energy & Natural Resources liaison partner for KPMG West Africa in the Africa region. He audited companies involved in the provision of mining services as well as gold prospecting. 

Reindorf Perbi’s audits of financial institutions have included big names like Standard Chartered Bank Ghana Limited, Ghana Venture Capital Fund Limited, CAL Bank, State Insurance Company, GT Bank Ghana, and Bank of Ghana. Regarding the latter, this was an eight-year period (2001-2009) of being the Engagement Partner for the audit of the Central Bank of Ghana, checking the checker. RB’s audit of other miscellaneous companies included those in the manufacture and sale of cosmetics and pharmaceutical products, and hardware, various companies in telecommunication and shipping and private-public ventures including audit of a company involved in Ghana’s National Electrification Project.

Global Trust, Local Thrust

Of particular intrigue is the fact that a significant number of projects of global funding partners like USAID, International Development Agency, the European Union and the World Bank being implemented locally would have Reindorf Perbi as the lead engagement partner. And by local I mean in Ghana or even within the West African sub-region. Some of RB’s financial audits of the European Union, European Development Fund and European Economic Commission have been CSSVD Phase 1 of Stabex, Ministry of Health support programme (CHIM Project no. 8 ACP GH03, 2003), Ghana Audit Service (Project no. 8 ACP GH02 in 1998 and 8 ACP TPS in 2003), setting the strategy, planning and supervising field work, preparation and review of reports.

The Ghana Living Standards Survey 4 was a joint European Commission-World Bank Project (No. 7 ACP Gh 035-35, 2001) that Reindorf Perbi was financial auditor of as KPMG’s engagement partner. R.B. was the concurrent partner who ensured that all matters relating to reporting consideration were taken into account regarding the financial audit of Pan-African Institute for Development (PAID).  He reviewed the working papers and reports submitted by the field staff, ensured that all quality control considerations were met and led discussions and presentations of our reports. This was a project in Burkina Faso, financed by the Netherlands Government, which involved checking compliance of project expenditures with approved budget, accounting of all revenues and reporting on the same.

Family Matters

With all these gargantuan projects under his watch, RB managed to form a flourishing family. In fact, he had strategized with his wife for her to take a seasonal and less time-demanding professional route in order that they might fend well for the children.

R.B. married the first child of the celebrated ethnomusicologist Emeritus Professor J.H. Kwabena Nketia, Akosua Adoma, at the University of Ghana in 1977. She would end up as a professor of history at the same University and between them have four (4) children–two boys and two girls: Dr. Yaw Perbi (The HuD Group, Kwiverr, Lausanne Movement), Mrs. Amma Eleblu (PriceWaterhouseCoopers), Adwoa Konadu Perbi (Gates Foundation) and Nana Nketia Perbi (Stanbic Bank Ghana). At the time of writing, R.B. and Akosua had 11 grandchildren.

SIGNIFICANCE

On Saving a Nation

All of Reindorf Perbi’s professional gravitas would come to bear on saving his nation Ghana from political mayhem when the Supreme Court hearing the 2012 election petition challenging the legitimacy of declaring President John Dramani Mahama as President settled on KPMG “as referees in counting pink sheets exhibits produced before the court as evidence of alleged irregularities in the December 2012 presidential elections.” The court, presided over by Justice William Atuguba on May 9, 2013, “took the decision after the exact number of pink sheets exhibits had become a dispute between the petitioners and the National Democratic Congress (NDC), a respondent in the case.” The presidential candidate of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, his running mate, Dr Mahamadu Bawumia, and the Chairman of the NPP, Mr Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey had alleged that gross and widespread irregularities took place on the face of the pink sheets from 11,842 polling stations.

The hearing of the substantive petition began on April 17, 2013 and had been muddied by inconsistency of the vital electoral documents that are signed on the ground, at polling stations, by representatives of the various political parties. This was a serious and sensitive matter that some had even described as a “Pink Sheet “War.”” As deputy senior partner of KPMG at the time many like me had no doubt that the nation as a whole and the process itself was in safe hands knowing the calibre of a professional Mr. Perbi was and the depth of character he and the KPMG brand he had helped grow from the late 1970s and then the mid 1980s possessed. And we were not disappointed.

Led by the senior partner, Mr. Joe Winful, KPMG presented 15 copies of their final report to the registrar of the Supreme Court by 9am on June 24, 2013. As Mr. Winful intimated on behalf of KPMG, “We worked thoroughly and tirelessly, including weekends and sometimes up to 2 a.m., in order to finish the work on time.” He emphasized how “We have done our professional work diligently and are prepared to defend our work when called to testify in the case.” The character, competence and care of RB and co. no doubt contributed to the salvation of the nation.

Education as Bedrock

Reindorf Perbi is not only the proud product of solid education but a prime promoter of it, from sponsoring his own external family to broader initiatives in his hometown of Mampong, Akuapem. This belief in education has seen him volunteer to serve on the boards of significant educational establishments in Ghana like Achimota School and Akosombo International School as well as a five-year tenure on the University of Ghana Council. There are times when he has stepped in the classroom himself, whether in teaching Leadership and Management at Haggai Institute or as a former part-time tutor in accountancy at the University of Professional Studies and Government Accountancy School, Asylum Down, Accra.

Awards

Mr. Reindorf Baah Perbi’s illustrious work has not gone unnoticed. He has been the recipient of several awards, spanning his school days to this post-retirement era. As a budding leader myself, I remember being so inspired by the citation in the book cover of a copy of Spiritual Leadership that I chanced upon in his vast library. That citation acknowledged his excellence in leadership of the University Christian Fellowship of the Ghana Fellowship of Evangelical Students (GHAFES) as its president in the early 1970s. He has also had the privilege of being a former honorary auditor of Scripture Union Ghana.

Not too long ago, the International Needs Ghana board presented the Ray Harrison Distinguished Service Award to Reindorf. He was board chair in 1988 during those crucial days when International Needs ventured into the Trokosi system to rescue young women from the claws of a system of shrine slavery. You may read more about that here. This campaign gained attention all over the world.

Also, many who didn’t know that the farming genes from his parents weren’t as suppressed as they thought were caught by surprise when in 2009 RB won the Best Cattle Farmer in Wetsonya, Eastern Region of Ghana at the National Farmers Day awards. He is a Lifelong Fellow of the Oxford Club, USA.

Membership of Boards

The following are some boards and councils that Mr. Perbi has served on, and in some cases chaired:

  • Institute for Christian Impact (chair of the board until recently)
  • Guaranty Trust Bank (Ghana) Limited board  (2017-to August 2018)
  • University of Ghana Council (2017 – 2021)
  • KPMG West Africa board (2005-2007)
  • Institute of Chartered Accountants (Ghana) ICA(G) council
  • Ghana-Netherlands Chamber of Commerce (GNCBB)
  • International Needs (Ghana) board (1985 – 2000), board chair
  • International Needs Network (New Zealand) (2006 – 2012), as External International Board member and Treasurer
  • Adisadel College Endowment Fund (Vice-chairman)
  • Legon Interdenominational Church (LIC), Council of Elders
  • Haggai Institute Alumni Association of Ghana (board chair)
  • Senior Advisory Committee for Ghana Fellowship of Evangelical Students (GHAFES), Chair
  • Nketia Music Foundation, Chair
  • Genius Youth Club, Patron
Publications and Presentations

Reindorf is a powerful presenter and prolific writer in both his personal and professional capacity. This can be traced back to his student days in both the second and third cycles. In the first dozen years of his work life, one of his moments of shining was as a Rapporteur-General during the Association of Accountancy Bodies of West Africa (ABWA) maiden conference in Abeokuta Nigeria (1986). He still prides in his “The Accountant and the Control of Corruption” article in The Professional Accountant, a magazine of the Institute of Chartered Accountants Ghana (ICAG) two decades ago (2005). To two key audiences–Ghana’s Minister of Finance as well as the Council of ICAG–he presented a key paper that year after on “The Need for Change in Government of Ghana Financial Year.” That same year was his lecture on “The Professional Accountant and the Public Interest” to the Joint Professional Bodies Association Continuing Professional Development.

RB has presented umpteen times as a member faculty for Leadership & Management workshops and training of Haggai Institute Alumni Association of Ghana and is a contributor to the LIC Magazine, the publication of the Legon Interdenominational Church (at the University of Ghana) where he’s been worshipping for the last thirty plus years. He on occasion preaches there, and in other churches, as well.

Twice, Mr. Perbi has been a speaker at the HORASIS Global Conference (2018 and 2019). RB has visited/attended meetings and conferences/ training in 39 countries in Africa, Europe, U.S.A, Canada, South America, Asia and the Middle East.

Retirement? Not Really.

After a cumulative thirty-two (32) years at KPMG (1974-1977; 1986-2015) Reindorf Kofi Baah Perbi retired as Deputy Senior Partner of KPMG Ghana in April 2015, where he had provided direct  assistance in managing the Ghana Practice, as well as been the Partner in charge of Quality and Risk Management, Ethics & Independence, and Human Resource. He had earlier been leading Management Consulting, Audit, Receivership & Liquidations and Special Engagements. RBP served as a member of KPMG’s Executive Board for West Africa also, a key role that would take him to various countries in the sub-region like Sierra leone, Nigeria and Burkina Faso, 

At his retirement, it was humbling to hear how many of his Accounting, Management Consulting, and Audit colleagues honoured him for this one thing: integrity. I sat at those banquets (yes, there was more than one! Lol!) soliloquising, “I want that. When all is said and done, that’s the kind of man I want to be!” Mr. Perbi is in what I would call “active retirement” as he, among other things, serves as a very involved Executive Chairman of CEDARS Investments Ltd., which he founded in ? and is a recent director of the Adansi Rural Bank Plc. He often travels out of Accra on various adventures within the country.

Governor-in-Chief and Advisor-in-Chief

‘Chief’ is a nickname his contemporaries from Adisadel College have for RB (we’ll save that story for another day). With all the amazing life and leadership experiences underneath his belt, including equipped with in-depth knowledge in Governance, Petroleum, Mining, Manufacturing, Financial and Construction sectors, it is no wonder that a year after retirement, Guaranty Trust Bank (Ghana) appointed him to their board as Independent Non-Executive Director, describing him as “a seasoned accountant and investment consultant.” Reindorf’s five-year membership of the ACCA Global Forum, for Risk & Governance, spanned his pre and post-retirement periods  (2012 – to 2017).

RB has served as Council Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (Ghana) and on several governance and advisory boards. As Consultant/Head Reviewer of the Quality Assurance and Monitoring Unit, Mr. Reindorf B. Perbi ended his consultancy tenure with the Institute of Chartered Accountants Ghana as lead reviewer in 2021, after a fruitful three-year period spanning December 2018 to December 2021. RB has served as a member of the University of Ghana Council, sometimes presiding over and dissolving the sessions of the Congregation/Graduation, sitting in for the Chancellor Kofi Annan (2008-2018) or Mary Chinery-Hesse (2018-present).

PELÉ

Mr. Reindorf Baah Perbi serves as an audit and governance consultant at PELÉ where authentic and customised relationships and resources are offered to C-level executives to grow personally, succeed professionally, and become significant societally. We just could not resist  leveraging his immense experience and expertise to help many others to be and do the same–and more.

CONCLUSION

Here is an inspiring global leader who represents many unsung heroes. Whether as a Chartered Accountant or Management Consultant, Reindorf Kofi Baah Perbi has been and/or orchestrated the financial and managerial backbone of many companies to ensure shareholder value without fanfare and with hardly any online presence. RB has led a quiet and peaceable life, retained faithfully his wife and family and as in his corporate life, has been the trellis that has held up all sorts of vines to flourish.

Reindorf has wealth that we know is earned and a name that is even better than riches, giving his descendants the pride to carry the name and the courage to place it on various commercial as well as social ventures. The name has opened many doors. If integrity had a face, it would be that of R.B. Perbi, an African colossus in finance and a poster child of integrity. And we who know him best, love and respect him most. That, is success. 

 

Post Script: At his seventy-fifth birthday dinner in Accra on 28th April 2025, RBP was pleasantly surprised by the dual launch of the Perbi Family Foundation (finally formalising the immense philanthropy of the family locally and globally) and of his full autobiography project to be published by the end of 2025, DV.

 

ENDNOTES

  1. John C. Maxwell 
  2. Yaw Perbi. “I Don’t Care How Good You Are–If You’re Not a ‘Walkie Talkiie’. www.yawperbi.com https://yawperbi.com/dont-care-good-2if-youre-not-walkie-talkie/
  3.  Ibid.
  4.  Ivy Benson. “Ghana: Supreme Court Contracts KPMG.“ All Africa. 10 May 2013. https://allafrica.com/stories/201305101597.html
  5.  Ibid
  6. Samuel K. Obour. “KPMG report ready.” Graphic Online. June 24, 2013. https://www.graphic.com.gh/news/politics/kpmg-report-ready.html
  7. My Joy Online. “KPMG done auditing pink sheets.” MyJoyOnline.Com. June 1, 2013. https://www.myjoyonline.com/kpmg-done-auditing-pink-sheets/
  8. Samuel K. Obour. “KPMG report ready.” Graphic Online. June 24, 2013. https://www.graphic.com.gh/news/politics/kpmg-report-ready.html
  9. Ibid.
  10. Ghana. International Needs. https://ineeds.org.uk/countries/ghana/
  11.  Yaw Perbi. “I Don’t Care How Good You Are–If You’re Not a ‘Walkie Talkiie’. www.yawperbi.com https://yawperbi.com/dont-care-good-2if-youre-not-walkie-talkie/
  12. Ben Ackah-Mensah and GTBank. “GTBank Appoints a New Director to its Board.” 31 August 2017.
  13. https://www.gtbghana.com/media-centre/press-releases/gtbank-appoints-a-new-director-to-its-board
  14.  University of Ghana, Legon. “UG Holds July 2018 Congregation Ceremonies.” 23 July, 2018. https://old1.ug.edu.gh/news/ug-holds-july-2018-congregation-ceremonies
  15. https://old1.ug.edu.gh/pad/sites/pad/files/u6/paddocs/NOVEMBER%20CONGREGATION%20COLLEGE%20OF%20HUMANITIES%20UNDERGRADUATE%20PROGRAMME-min_0.pdf

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