Ghana's economic woes is over-Finance Minister
Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
Accra, July 2, Ghanadot - The
Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Dr. Kwabena Dufour
has indicated that the worse was over for the country’s
ailing economy with the approval of the US$535 million by
the World Bank.
The facility is a balance of payment support and the first
set of credits of US$1.2 billion the Bank plans to support
the government of Ghana with over the next three years.
When approved by parliament, the facility will be the
largest credit facility the country has received from the
Briton wood institutions and without conditionality.
The Minister argued that Ghana was making great strides in
it economic recovery programme and thus the facility was an
acknowledgment by the World Bank of the commitment of
government at managing the economy.
“These resources could not have come at a better time. We
have been working hard to minimize the impact of the global
financial crunch on our people and these facilities will go
a long way in supplementing our internal revenue generation
and poverty reduction efforts. It is our duty as a
government to bring the macroeconomic situation back on
track, and we are committed to implementing appropriate
measures in this regard.” He noted.
Ghana is currently nursing a fiscal deficit of 14.9 per cent
which the National Democratic Congress government hopes to
reduce to 9.4 per cent in the first year of administration.
Speaking on City FM’s morning show yesterday, Dr. Dufour
said although there are concerns for Ghana to strive at
weaning itself from the World Bank and the other Briton Wood
institutions he finds nothing wrong if the could access a
cheaper loan from these institutions especially at a time
when the country’s economic standing depends largely on the
World Bank and other donor institutions.
The World Bank in its statement on the approval of the loan
stated that the facility was to help offset The challenges
in its macro-economy brought about by a combination of
domestic and external shocks
(fuel and food crisis, droughts and floods in the North,
financial crisis and global slowdown) which revealed and
exacerbated a number of structural challenges in the public
sector in general, and in the energy sector in particularly,
and which, if left un-tackled, would undermine Ghana's
growth and development prospects.
An Economic Governance and Poverty Reduction Credit (EGPRC)
which absorbs $300m of the facility is a budget support
operation which aims to assist Ghana’s efforts to bring the
fiscal situation back on a sound and sustainable track while
protecting the development objectives set forth in Ghana’s
Second Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy (GPRS II) for
the period 2006-2009.
The credit will be disbursed in two tranches. The first
tranche of US$150 million will be affected immediately the
financing agreement is signed by the government and the
World Bank in early July 2009. The second will take place in
the third quarter of 2009, immediately after the Government
has completed the actions it has committed to take.
Accra, July 2, Ghanadot - The Minister of Finance and
Economic Planning Dr. Kwabena Dufour has indicated that the
worse was over for the country’s ailing economy with the
approval of the US$535 million by the World Bank.....More
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