Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta

Ghana’s Debt Stock Rises To ¢402bn In July 2022 – BoG

Story By: Will Agyapong

Ghana’s public debt stock has gone up from the ¢393 billion recorded in June to ¢402 billion in July 2022, with a difference of ¢9 billion in the monthly debt analysis.

This was revealed in the October 2022 Bank of Ghana Summary of Economic and Financial Data released on October 6.

The ¢402 billion is equivalent to 80% of the Gross Domestic Product.

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Based on the data by BoG, Ghana did not borrow fresh funds from the international market during the period due to various unfavourable economic conditions occasioned by a weak local currency and high debt levels.

However, the debt level will continue, following the $750 million Afreximbank loan in August 2022.

According to the data, the external debt remains unchanged at $28 billion, translating to ¢298 billion, equivalent to 59% of GDP.

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The domestic debt, however, has been going up since January 2022 because of the significant borrowing by the government in the domestic financial market.

It stood at ¢204 billion in July 2022, from ¢190.1 billion in June 2022.

The domestic debt began the year at ¢181.9 billion in January 2022 and then went up to ¢185.4 billion in February 2022 and ¢190.1 billion in March 2022. It subsequently shot up to ¢189.2 in April 2022 and ¢188.5 billion in May 2022.

In June 2022, data provided by BoG showed an additional 41.6 billion Ghana cedis that pushed Ghana’s public debt stock to GH¢393.4 billion.

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In dollars, Ghana’s total public debt stock, as of June 2022, was $54.4 billion.

In Dollar terms, the debt dropped by about $4 billion in the first six months from $58.6. billion in January 2022 to $54.4 billion in June 2022.

In Cedi terms, however, the total debt stock within the first six months of this year increased by about ¢41 billion.

The June 2022 debt figure pegged Ghana’s debt to gross domestic product, GDP ratio to 78.3%, using an estimated GDP for 2022 of about 502 billion Ghana cedis.

The World Bank, in its latest Africa Pulse Report, classified Ghana as a high debt distress country as it projects the nation’s debt to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of 104.6% by the end of 2022.

According to the report, debt is expected to jump significantly, from 76.6% a year earlier, amid a widened government deficit, massive weakening of the cedi, and rising debt service costs.

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