Audio By Carbonatix
Former Chief Executive Officer of defunct UT Bank, Prince Kofi Amoabeng, has taken a swipe at some Ghanaian politicians for contributing to the woes of the Ghana cedi in recent times.
According to him, some politicians hoard the dollars, a situation which caused the high demand for the American greenback and the rapid depreciation of the cedi in 2022.
Speaking at the maiden edition of the McDan Business Forum, he said some of the problems with Ghana’s foreign exchange rate is caused by politicians who transact businesses in dollars.
"One thing that causes big demand for dollars is corruption. All the money they are making and stealing are not in cedis but in dollars”.
“They must change dollars. So they hide it under their beds and when they get the opportunity they put it outside”, he added.
He also described Ghana’s exchange rate regime as a pathetic one.
“Ghana exchange rate regime is a pathetic one. The so-called politicians are the ones hoarding the dollars, but it’s seen out there as if they are not the cause of all this. Corruption is part of our problem and we need to work on it”.
The Ghana cedi ended 2022 as the second weakest currency on the African continent with a year-to-date loss of 38.86% to the US dollar, according to Bloomberg.
Globally, the local currency placed 145th. The Sierra Leone Leone came 146th whilst the Argentina Peso and Sierra Lankan Rupee placed 147th and 148th respectively.
Mr. Amoabeng also advised Ghanaians to reduce their appetite for borrowing, lamenting, “The importation of goods is too much. So, we need to make bold decisions that stop all of this”.
Speaking on the probable cancellation of Ghana’s debt by some multilateral and bilateral partners, he welcomed the decision but questioned how this can save Ghana’s economy.
"We owe so if that's the case then it's fine, but we have to work on some areas of the economy for sustainable growth”, he added.
Latest Stories
-
‘I will support whoever wins’ – Bryan Acheampong pledges loyalty to NPP flagbearer
1 hour -
‘We’ll come back stronger’ – Bryan Acheampong vows NPP revival after 2024 defeat
2 hours -
Ivory Coast miners start paying higher royalties after failed resistance, sources say
2 hours -
Nigeria’s House to look into row between regulator and Dangote over fuel imports, pricing
2 hours -
UK government considers advertising or subscription model for BBC
2 hours -
Morocco rolls out emergency aid during harsh winter weather
2 hours -
BBC declares it will fight Donald Trump’s defamation claim – but should it?
2 hours -
Second doctor sentenced in Matthew Perry overdose death
3 hours -
Trump expands US travel ban to Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and 2 other countries
3 hours -
Trump’s chief of staff disputes Vanity Fair story in which she criticises Vance and Musk
3 hours -
US unemployment rose in November to a four-year high
3 hours -
Trump repeats criticism of killed Hollywood director Rob Reiner
3 hours -
MIT professor shot at his Massachusetts home dies
3 hours -
Garnacho double at cardiff takes Chelsea through into EFL semis
5 hours -
Three friends jailed 27 years for stealing
5 hours
