Audio By Carbonatix
Senior Partner at the Africa Legal Associates and New Patriotic Party member, Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko has fought off claims that the taxpayer would lose gravely if the receiver of the failed banks fails to retrieve all the monies from their clean up.
While underscoring the importance of retrieving the said monies from the former owners and directors of the eight collapsed banks, Mr Otchere-Darko who is a close confidant of the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo said there are other means of getting back state monies expended in the clean-up.
He said the government can sell its shares in the Consolidated Bank Ghana, which was formed by merging some of the collapsed banks.
The proceeds from the sale, he said, can be invested in developmental projects to the benefit of the taxpayer.
“…because I don’t think this government came into office thinking it was going to spend monies on things that are not in its manifesto,” Mr. Otchere-Darko said on Newsfile Saturday.
Meanwhile, NDC MP for Yapei Kusawgu Constituency, John Jinapor who also spoke on Newsfile said there were better options the central bank could have used to reform the financial sector.
It could have been done in “a one-off approach rather than taking them in piece…”
He also said the crisis cannot be allowed to go on forever and that the Bank of Ghana must bring it to an end, even if it meant “writing off something.”
The National Democratic Congress has for long criticised the government’s approach to reforming the financial sector.
Ex-President and current Flagbearer of the party, John Mahama has insisted the regulator could have supported the banks to remain in existence instead of collapsing them; a move that has led to mistrust in the financial space after 23 Savings and Loans companies also went down which was preceded by 386 Microfinance institutions going down.
Mahama criticised the government’s handling of the reforms in a live video
The BoG has justified its approach to cleaning up the sector on different occasions. In the case of the banks, Governor, Ernest Addison said some of them should not have existed.
Sovereign bank, for instance, he said, obtained their banking license by false pretenses, “through the use of suspicious and non-existent capital.”
Amid all the criminal accusations however, little progress has been made. Since 2017 when the UT and Capital banks became the first to go, it was only in 2019 that criminal prosecutions began.
The BoG, has meanwhile, raised the minimum capital for banks to GH¢400million and also limited the tenure for bank CEOs all in the bid to sanitise the sector.
Latest Stories
-
Two Turkish firms to construct water treatment plant for Eastern Accra
1 second -
Rising sophistication in science and technology is deepening corruption – Kufuor
14 minutes -
Allegations of product hoarding by OMCs are baseless – CBOD
18 minutes -
Council of State not enough to check executive – Kufuor
19 minutes -
CLOGSAG strike without production: Ghana’s dangerous culture of entitlement
22 minutes -
Achimota School raises infrastructure concerns as surging demand outpaces facilities
23 minutes -
Ghana’s economic challenges fuel corruption, private sector must grow – Kufuor
25 minutes -
Five Iranian footballers granted Australian visas after anthem protest
27 minutes -
Kufuor calls for higher pay for public servants to curb corruption
36 minutes -
Kufuor calls for stronger separation of powers, greater parliamentary control over national budget
45 minutes -
Kufuor proposes non-partisan chamber to vet presidential nominees
56 minutes -
Executives of ACCA and the newly inducted ACCA members in a group photo at the event
59 minutes -
Kufuor proposes second house of Parliament made up of traditional leaders, professionals
1 hour -
‘Thirst in the North’: Chiyifoyili residents say severe water shortage is straining marriages
1 hour -
Ghana Immigration arrests 93 foreigners, rescues 73 abuse victims in DEVTRACO estate raid
1 hour
