Accra, Ghana:
An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team led by Mr. Stéphane Roudet,
Mission Chief for Ghana, visited Accra during December 1 – 13, 2022, to
discuss with the Ghanaian authorities IMF support for their policy and
reform plans.
At the end of the mission, Mr. Roudet issued the following statement:
I am pleased to announce that the IMF team
reached staff-level agreement with the Ghanaian authorities on a three-year
program supported by an arrangement under the
Extended Credit Facility (ECF)
in the amount of SDR 2.242 billion or about US$3 billion. The economic
program aims to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability
while laying the foundation for stronger and more inclusive growth. The
staff-level agreement is subject to IMF Management and Executive Board
approval and receipt of the necessary financing assurances by Ghana’s
partners and creditors.
“
The Ghanaian authorities have committed to a wide-ranging economic
reform program, which builds on the government’s Post-COVID-19 Program
for Economic Growth (PC-PEG) and tackles the deep challenges facing the
country.
“Key reforms aim to ensure the sustainability of public finances while
protecting the vulnerable.
The fiscal strategy relies on frontloaded measures to increase domestic
resource mobilization and streamline expenditure. In addition, the
authorities have committed to strengthening social safety nets, including
reinforcing the existing targeted cash-transfer program for vulnerable
households and improving the coverage and efficiency of social spending.
“Structural reforms will be introduced to underpin the fiscal strategy and
ensure a durable consolidation. These include developing a medium-term plan
to generate additional revenue and advancing reforms to bolster tax
compliance. This will help create space for growth-enhancing measures and
social spending. Efforts will also be made to strengthen public expenditure commitment controls,
improve fiscal transparency (including the reporting and monitoring of
arrears), improve the management of public enterprises, and tackle
structural challenges in the energy and cocoa sectors. The authorities are
also committed to further bolstering governance and accountability.
“To support the objective of restoring public debt sustainability, the
authorities have announced a comprehensive debt restructuring. Sufficient
assurances and progress on this front will be needed before the proposed
Fund-supported program can be presented to the IMF Executive Board for
approval.
“Reducing inflation, enhancing resilience to external shocks, and improving
market confidence are also important program priorities. Accordingly, the
Bank of Ghana will continue to strengthen its monetary policy framework and
promote exchange rate flexibility to rebuild external buffers. As part of
the authorities’ debt strategy, a domestic debt exchange has been launched.
The authorities are committed to taking the necessary mitigation measures
to ensure financial sector stability is preserved.
“IMF staff held meetings with Vice President Bawumia, Finance Minister
Ofori-Atta, and Bank of Ghana Governor Addison, and their teams, as well as
representatives from various government agencies. The IMF team has also
continued to engage with other stakeholders. Staff would like to express
their gratitude to the Ghanaian authorities, Parliament’s Finance Committee
and all the private sector, trade union, and civil society representatives
for their open and constructive engagement over the past few months.”