Myjoyonline News
 Home Page
 General News
 Business
 Politics
 Sports
 Health
 Education
 Articles/Features
 Science & Technology
 Entertainment
 Travel/Tourism
 Africa & International
 Nations Cup 2008
 
 
Re-denomination to cost over 411 billion cedis
Previous Page
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Daily Dispatch has estimated the re-denomination of the national currency being embarked upon by the Bank of Ghana to cost 411.7 billion cedis.

The paper said it arrived at the conservative figure after a collaborative costing exercise with some senior BoG officials.

Parliament has already requested for the total cost of the exercise and is awaiting a response from the Governor of the Central Bank, Dr. Paul Acquah.

The estimated cost of printing the first tranche of new currencies, according to the paper in a report filed by Ben Ephson and Kwamina Kum, is US$39,760,000, about 381,700,000,000 cedis billion.

Other expenses involving the re-denomination exercise are estimated at US$3,125,000, about 30 billion cedis. The total estimated costs are $42,885,000 or 411,700,000,000.

The paper explained that it arrived at these conservative estimated costs after various considerations.

“A July 26, 2002 press release by the BoG stated that the total cost of printing of new notes, including additional quantities of 1,000 cedis, 2,000 cedis and 5,000 cedis denominations amounted to 110 billion cedis ($13,253,000) at that time.

“Our sources at the BoG explained that the 110 billion cedis cost in 2002 was for additional quantities of three different currencies that had been designed already. The estimated costs (conservative) for the first tranche of five different currencies include the new design and extra security features. The 30 billion cedis ($3.125 million) includes the cost of hiring the South African company assisting in the exercise, advertising and extra security measures in the course of sending the new currencies around.”

The paper said its BoG sources also revealed that the introduction of coins would greatly reduce the rapid rate at which the Bank was printing new notes, especially in the lower denominations, to replace mutilated ones.

It said in 2002, a senior Bank of Ghana official told the Ghana News Agency that the bank spent 3 billion cedis a month to replace mutilated bank notes, and also hinted that between January and August, 2002, the BoG destroyed mutilated notes of various denominations, the equivalent of 244.3 billion cedis, an average of 30.5 billion cedis of bad currency each month.

Source: The Daily Dispatch



       

 
  Popular Stories


Search Our Website
 
 
 
OTHER BUSINESS STORIES
   Cargill Ghana cocoa plant to start in Nov
   Fishermen accuse government of deceit
   Ghanaian manufacturing sector is unprotected
   SSNIT demands social security for domestic servants and apprentices
   Barclays Bank appoints new MD
   AngloGold ordered to pay 275 transfered workers
   FDI up by 702%
   July Producer Price up 5.3%
   Tullow will boost investment 30% on Ghana project
   Ghana to host Aid Effectiveness Forum
   Fuel cost eases congestion
   Graphic outdoors new business paper
   NLA stings private lotto operators more - say GLOA's claim false
   Stock: Accra bourse index rises
   Fisheries Ministry denies foreign vessels engage in pair trawling