Finance
Minister blames Bank of Ghana for the depreciation of the
Cedi
Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
Accra, April 17, Ghanadot - The
Minister of Finance and Economy Planning, Dr. Kwabena
Duffuor, has blamed the Bank of Ghana (BoG) for the
depreciation of the country’s cedi, against major currencies
such as the U. S. Dollar and Pound
Sterling.
According to him, since the introduction of the Ghana Cedi
in 2007, it has witnessed significant depreciation in its
value, thereby reducing investor confidence in the economy.
Dr. Kwabena Duffuor disclosed this at a press conference in
Accra, to officially highlight the performance of the
economy of President Mills’ first 100 days in office.
He added that before the introduction of the cedi, the
country’s economic fundamentals, which were necessary to
support the value of the cedi at its appropriate level, were
all very weak.
These were the broad money supply (M2) and total liquidity
(M2+), which were all growing at very high levels; double
digit headline inflation and negative balance of government
finances.
Also, all the real sector indicators and composite index of
economy were all showing significant negative growth.
While, developments at the external front were equally very
disturbing, as trade balance was in deficit and increasing,
and the overall balance of payments had deteriorated, the
Finance Minister disclosed.
He explained that the driving factors behind the currency
depreciation were the introduction of the new cedi, and
liberalisation of the capital market to allow foreigners
acquire significant shares of government’s 3-year and 5-year
securities, saying “all these were inherited by the National
Democratic Congress (NDC) Government, and therefore one
cannot attribute the cedi depreciation to a government that
has been in power for only 100 days.”
Dr. Duffuor noted that notwithstanding the macroeconomic
imbalances at the time, the Ghana Cedi was introduced and
fixed at GH¢0.9200 equivalent to one Dollar.
“The Central Bank then tried to hold the currency from
serious depreciation, by intervening in the foreign market
to sell the country’s hard earned dollars to support
the cedi. Between July 2007 and December 2007, the
Central Bank sold $288 million to prop up the currency.”
He intimated that the year 2008 was characterised
by a continuous sharp
depreciation, and currency propping by the Central Bank, in
which $918 million was used by the bank to prop up the
falling cedi.
Due to the weak economic fundamentals, namely high spending
by the then government, and the associated growing fiscal
deficit, surging monetary growth, rising inflation, and
declining foreign reserves that continued to exist in the
economy, the cedi depreciated by 25.3% as against the dollar
in 2008.
The implication of this is that by December 2008, the cedi
had seriously been weakened, causing it to further
depreciate by 13.6% in the first quarter of this year.
Dr. Duffuor, who is a former Governor of the BoG, further
hinted that the Central Bank spent over $1.2 billion to prop
up the cedi between July 2007 and December 2008, yet the
currency lost some 31% of its value, emphasising that
“Ghanaians should therefore know that the currency had
depreciated significantly long before the advent of the NDC
government.”
He blamed the previous government for copiously liberalising
the country’s capital market to foreigners, adding
that “beginning in 2006, the
Central Bank allowed non-residents to invest in government
securities, the result of this was that by December 2008,
foreign investors were holding 46% of the Government of
Ghana 3-year fixed bond and 87% of 5-year fixed bonds.
“The risk associated with foreign investors participating in
the capital market is that, when they sell their bonds to
local participants, it has serious foreign exchange
obligations for the local investor, which tend to put
pressure on the value of the domestic currency,” he noted.
To this end, Dr. Duffuor indicated that since the global
financial crisis emerged in October 2008, foreign investors
had offloaded a total of $145 million of their bonds to
local investors.
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