Audio By Carbonatix
The Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Ernest Addison, has urged the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to remain steadfast and adapt its lending toolkits to changing global conditions to serve its vulnerable membership better.
This follows acute debt challenges underscored by rising social and infrastructural needs, amid spillovers from the Covid-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, tightening of global financing conditions, and climate-related disasters
Speaking on behalf of Governors of African Central Banks at the ongoing IMF/World Bank spring meetings in Morocco, he said “We restate our earlier request for increased concessional financing by aligning Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT) access thresholds with those of the General Resources Account (GRA) to ensure uniformity of treatment”.
In addition, Dr. Addison said “We call on the Fund to relax the PRGT eligibility criteria to foster access to adequate Fund support while reducing, suspending, or eliminating entirely surcharges for most vulnerable PRGT-eligible members facing acute debt challenges. We also reiterate our call for additional pledges from willing donors to close the gaps in PRGT resources. We further stress the criticality of a successful completion of the ongoing 16th General Review of Quota (GRQ) to reinforce IMF finances while protecting the quota share of the vulnerable members”.
The Governor also said the strengthening of multilateral coordination and efficiency of regulatory framework for debt resolution in LICs, through a formidable Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable (GSDR), is paramount.
While welcoming the latest developments on Zambia and Chad, he said “We underscore the need to revamp the G20 Common Framework (CF) to ensure timely, orderly, equitable, inclusive, and transparent debt restructuring for distressed members in the region including, Ghana, Ethiopia, and Malawi”.
In this regard, he called call for a carefully designed debt resolution mechanism, especially, for vulnerable members with large[1]domestic creditors as in the case of Ghana to help avert domestic financial market instability.
“In addition, improving debtor-creditor engagements through an enhanced GSDR while strengthening technical support to foster common understanding of all debt issues is macro-critical to bolster a swifter, proactive and systematic restructuring. We also reaffirm the request for debt standstill during times of negotiations to offer immediate relief to debtors and restate our request for multilateral debt cancellation for the most vulnerable members facing acute debt challenges”.
Furthermore, the Governor said an enhanced IMF’s cooperation with MDBs/RDBs is necessary to facilitate timely provision of MDBs/RDBs’ financial assistance for members facing significant debt and growth challenges.
He concluded by calling for the deepening of the Fund’s tailored capacity development and surveillance support, in collaboration with other international partners, saying, it is crucial to addressing member-specific bottlenecks for restoring public debt sustainability, and bolstering inclusive and sustainable economic growth and development in the region
Latest Stories
-
I changed Rhythms of Africa’25 date to honour Daddy Lumba’s funeral – Sonnie Badu
43 minutes -
KiDi gears up for another historic night at ‘Likor On The Beach’ 2025
44 minutes -
17 arrested as IGP special operations team intensifies crime raids in Northern Region
49 minutes -
Bright Simons: Is Bank of Ghana’s “Islamic Banking” rebrand too clever by half?
52 minutes -
Mahama celebrates Kenya at 62nd Jamhuri Day, calling for stronger African unity
54 minutes -
VAT on Insurance slowed policy uptake in 2025 — IBAG outgoing President
55 minutes -
Beyond Abu Trica: Are Ghana’s Banks failing as gatekeepers of financial integrity
58 minutes -
Ga-Dangme Council condemns alleged unlawful attempts to evict settlers at Okanta
59 minutes -
Ghanaian environmentalist builds Christmas tree from plastic waste to spotlight pollution crisis
60 minutes -
Noguchi makes HIV therapy breakthrough
1 hour -
ECOWAS leaders Convene in Abuja as Guinea-Bissau and Benin dominate agenda
1 hour -
US commends Mahama administration over cooperation on cybercrime, extradition
1 hour -
Pentecost University graduates 1,412 students, calls for jobs ready graduates at 2025 Convocation
1 hour -
Cocoa smuggling fueled by delayed payment by COCOBOD – Farmers
1 hour -
Bright Simons warns BoG’s ‘non-interest banking’ framework could create regulatory confusion
1 hour
