Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana spent about 45% of its revenue excluding grants to pay interest payments in 2022, the International Monetary Fund April 2023 Regional Outlook Report has revealed.
This placed the country at the number one position in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The high interest payments was due to the elevated public debt of the country estimated at 575 billion or $44 billion as of November 2023.
Though the government suspended interest payments on some selected external debts, the interest costs of domestic debt was very high.
Now, the interest payments to be paid this year will depend on a successful external debt restructuring with its creditors – bilateral, multilateral and Euro bondholders.
This may lead to suspension of some of the interest payments or extend the maturity period.
The government in 2023 announced it was highly debt distress, leading to a debt restructuring programme.
Meanwhile, Malawi and Zambia placed 2nd and 3rd respectively in Africa with the highest interest payments in 2022.

They were expected to have spent about 37% and 31% of their revenue excluding grants to pay interest payment.
Sub-Saharan Africa’s public debt ratio at 56% of GDP reaches alarming levels
The IMF said sub-Saharan Africa’s public debt ratio at 56 percent of Gross Domestic Product in 2022—has reached levels last seen in the early 2000s.
“Since the pandemic, the debt increase has been driven by widening fiscal deficits because of overlapping crises, slower growth, and exchange rate depreciations”, it added.
Furthermore, the Fund said elevated public debt levels have raised concerns about debt sustainability, with 19 of the region’s 35 low-income countries already in debt distress or facing high risk of debt distress in 2022—the same situation reported in the October 2022 Regional Economic Outlook: Sub-Saharan Africa.
Government spent ¢33.61bn on interest payments in 2021
In 2021, the government spent ¢33.61 billion on interest payments, the Bank of Ghana Monetary Policy Report disclosed.
According to the report, domestic interest payments accounted for 78.9% of the total interest payments. Total interest payments, however, constituted about 50.4% of domestic revenue.
Latest Stories
-
J.J. Rawlings Foundation mourns the death of June 4 uprising figure Sgt. Peter Tasiri
20 minutes -
Third round of Russia-Ukraine talks to take place as strikes continue
27 minutes -
Kofi Asmah: Cocoa prices, turbulence and the cost of true leadership
29 minutes -
Women in Russian man videos scandal not cheap – Issifu Ali
39 minutes -
Cedi safe amid digital asset growth – BoG
47 minutes -
Photos: EPA busts 14 containers of illegal mining machines at Tema Port
52 minutes -
Harmonious Chorale to represent Africa in Poland and Sweden as it kicks off 20th-anniversary celebrations
53 minutes -
We can’t wait forever for AfCFTA – AGI demands alternative regional trade access
57 minutes -
The Drama of Cocoa politics: When farmers become puppets
57 minutes -
CSIR-BRRI advocates use of local materials in production to reduce cement prices
59 minutes -
Three miners killed in rock collapse at Gbane
1 hour -
Awudome, Osu cemeteries not full — Managers
1 hour -
Africa’s grand stage of honour: Why Ghana hosts POTY 2026
1 hour -
Hillary Clinton accuses Trump administration of a ‘cover-up’ over its handling of Epstein documents
2 hours -
Project C.U.R.E begins 10-day assessment to support Ghana Medical Trust Fund’s NCD fight
2 hours
