IMF: Ghana talks constructive, more work needed on debt analysis

Story By: Reuters.com

 The International Monetary Fund said on Friday that talks with Ghana’s government about a potential loan programme had been constructive but that more work was needed on a debt-sustainability analysis.

Ghana approached the IMF for financial support in July as foreign investors dumped its debt and as street protests broke out over rocketing prices.

A team from the Fund arrived days later to begin talks on a support programme and reforms to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability in the gold, oil and cocoa-producing nation.

- Advertisement -

Discussions resumed on Sept. 26 with a mission that ended on Friday.

The IMF said in a statement that its staff would now return to Washington for further technical work including assessing Ghana’s debt sustainability.

“The discussions with the authorities will also continue in the weeks ahead. … We reaffirm our commitment to support Ghana in these challenging times,” the fund added.

- Advertisement -

Ghanaian policymakers have taken steps to address the economy’s rapid deterioration, including cutting spending and implementing aggressive interest rate hikes.

 

The central bank raised its main lending rate (GHCBIR=ECI) by a further 250 basis points to a five-year high of 24.5% on Thursday, saying inflation and risks remained high.

The cedi currency is down around 40% against the dollar this year although its slide has slowed , aided by the disbursement of a $750 million loan from Afreximbank and the signing of a syndicated cocoa loan of $1.13 billion.

Inflation, however, climbed to a 21-year peak of 33.9% in August (GHCPIY=ECI).

- Advertisement -

Net foreign reserves have dwindled to $2.7 billion in September from $6.1 billion in January.

Ghana’s finance minister last week said negotiations with the IMF would be fast-tracked

Share This Article
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *