Audio By Carbonatix
The Bank of Ghana’s decision to set higher cash reserve requirements for commercial banks could impact negatively on credit to the private sector, a research led by Dr. Richmond Atuahene has revealed.
According to the Bank of Ghana March 2024 Monetary Policy Committee report, private sector credit growth by banks remained sluggish, with February 2024 showing a 5.1% increase compared to 29.5% growth in February 2023. Conversely, investments by banks in Government of Ghana (GOG) and Bank of Ghana (BOG) instruments surged to GH¢53.6 billion, marking a 67.6% year-on-year rise, contrasting with a 36.9% increase in the corresponding period of 2023.
The Central Bank at its last Monetary Policy Committee meeting in March 2024 announced an adjustment for the existing Cash Reserve Ratio of 15% with a now graduated ratio based on the existing loan to the loan-to-deposit ratio. They were banks with a Loan to Deposit ratio above 55% will have to meet a CRR of 15%, banks with a Loan to Deposit ratio between 40% to 55% will have to meet a CRR of 20% and banks with Loan to Deposit ratios below 40% will be required to hold a CRR of 25%.
But the research by Dr. Richmond Atuahene (Banking Consultant), Isaac Kofi Agyei (Data & Research Analyst), and K.B Asante (Chartered Certified Accountant) warned of a probable banking sector crisis in the medium and long term as a result of this policy.
This situation, it explained, could ultimately result in the collapse, merger, and acquisition of commercial banks as a measure to safeguard depositors' funds.
“If the central bank decides to maintain the increase in the Cash Reserve Ratio, there's a high probability of another banking sector crisis emerging in the medium and long term. This situation could ultimately result in the collapse, merger, and acquisition of commercial banks as a measure to safeguard depositors' funds”.
BoG’s CRR has a notable flaw
The report also stated the BoG’s policy on the New Cash Reserve Ratios has a notable flaw in that it overlooked the GH¢50.6 billion worth of government bonds that were previously restructured during the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP). These bonds constituted part of the commercial banks’ total deposits of GH¢224 billion, with customers' deposits being utilised for purchasing these government bonds.
Consequently, it said the Bank of Ghana should have considered the GH¢50.6 billion of bonds that were restructured before implementing the new, higher Cash Reserve Ratios; otherwise, it amounts to double accounting. The government bonds have a final maturity period in 2031.
BoG urged to reconsider reducing CRR
The report said while it can be beneficial for central banks to implement higher Cash/Primary Reserve ratios to control inflation and stabilise the local currency's value, excessive ratios can lead commercial banks to hold more cash with the central bank, thereby limiting their ability to lend.
Conversely, lower cash reserve ratios allow banks to maintain less cash with the central bank, boosting their lending capacity.
The report urged the Bank of Ghana to reconsider reducing the mammoth cash reserve ratios by taking into account the GH¢50.6 billion of customers’ deposits used to purchase restructured government bonds with an extended maturity period until 2031.
Furthermore, it wants the Bank of Ghana and commercial banks to exert significant effort to reduce the current Non-Performing Loan (NPL) ratio from 24% to around 10% to fortify the banking sector's resilience, adding, “a resilient banking sector encompasses more than just profitability; high NPLs can lead to poor capitalization among banks, liquidity challenges, and even insolvency for some institutions”.
Over the past two years, the private sector has suffered due to the government's overwhelming presence in the treasury bill market.
The report said to revitalize the private sector, authorities must focus on lowering short-term bill rates below 20% to foster competitiveness in the domestic market. Additionally, efforts should be made to curb the increasing diversion of credit from the private sector to the central government.
Latest Stories
-
GPL 2025/26: Medeama score late to draw with Basake Holy Stars
14 minutes -
Rapperholic Creators challenge blends digital talent and financial discipline for Ghanaian youth
23 minutes -
Justice on a leash – Minority claims law enforcement is being used to punish political opponents
26 minutes -
Dr Gideon Boako provides ¢10k seed capital for TanoFest Programme
33 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover rose by 64.39% to GH¢6.75bn
49 minutes -
Dutylex promises more in 2026; targets market expansion
56 minutes -
Government grants permits for Responsible Cooperative Mining in Anwia, Teleku Bokazo
57 minutes -
Bawumia still NPP’s strongest asset — Northern region operations team
58 minutes -
Christian Service University inaugurates Most Rev. Prof. Emmanuel Asante as first chancellor
1 hour -
Kumasi gridlock forces commuters to walk miles ahead of Christmas rush
1 hour -
Paramount Chief of Assin Fosu honours John Boadu at grand durbar
1 hour -
Minority flags election petitions, youth unemployment and third-term agenda as democratic threats
1 hour -
Yamfo Traditional Council petitions President Mahama over security threat at College of Health
1 hour -
PUWU threatens industrial action over illegal takeover of Ghana Water Lands in Ashanti region
1 hour -
Minority accuses state of legitimising illegal gold and environmental destruction
1 hour
