Audio By Carbonatix
Total expenditures including arrears clearance and discrepancy for the first half of 2024 was estimated at GH¢101.21 billion, the July 2024 Monetary Policy Report by the Bank of Ghana has revealed.
This represents 9.6% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
However, it was below the target of GH¢104.77 billion (10% of GDP) by 3.4 percent despite its 66.5% year-on-year increase.
Compensation
Compensation of Employees including wages and salaries, pensions & gratuities, and other wage related expenditure) was GH¢29.30 billion.
This was marginally lower than the target of GH¢29.96 billion. This outturn fell short of its target by 2.2% and recorded 48.4% year-on-year growth.
In terms of fiscal flexibility, compensation of employees constituted 39.5% of domestic revenue mobilised during the period under review.
Goods and services
Use of Goods and Services totalled GH¢5.77 billion, higher than the expected target of GH¢4.56 billion, an overrun of 26.6%.
This expense was lower than the GH¢6.25 billion observed in the corresponding period of 2023, reflecting a year-on-year contraction of 7.6%.
Interest payments
Total interest payments of GH¢19.03 billion fell below the envisioned target of GH¢26.35 billion for the review period.
This outturn compares with GH¢13.39 billion recorded in the corresponding period of 2023.
The decreased interest payment was mainly on account of a partial freeze on debt service because of the debt restructuring programme by the government to help resolve Ghana’s fiscal and debt vulnerabilities.
Grants
Grants to other government units made up of National Health Fund, Education Trust Fund, Road Fund, Energy Fund, District Assemblies Common Fund, Retention of IGFs, transfer to GNPC, Ghana Infrastructure Fund and other earmarked funds all summed up to GH¢19.70 billion, higher than the target of GH¢17.55 billion.
This resulted in a positive deviation of 12.2%. It also recorded a year-on-year growth of 83.4%.
Capital expenditure
Capital expenditure for the period under review was GH¢13.91 billion (1.3% of GDP), lower than the programmed target of GH¢19.13 billion (1.8% of GDP) by 27.2 percent.
This outturn represented a year-on-year growth of 107.8%.
Other expenditure
Other expenditure for the second quarter of 2024 was GH¢12.98 billion, 95.1% above the target of GH¢6.65billion.
Out of this, the energy sector payment shortfalls totalled GH¢10.60 billion (1.0% of GDP), higher than the programmed target of GH¢2.84 billion (0.3% of GDP).
This contributed to the resulting positive deviation of 95.1%. This outturn of GH¢12.98 billion dwarfed the GH¢3.76 billion recorded in the corresponding period of 2023.
Latest Stories
-
Pan-African Progressive Front hosts landmark online conference ahead of Geneva Forum
5 minutes -
Civil society is not an adversary of gov’t, but partners in nation-building – Mahama
13 minutes -
Defeamekpor calls for interdiction of Land Ministry’s director of finance
17 minutes -
Atebubu Paramount Chief visits NPA boss to strengthen ties
17 minutes -
TGMA Group of the Year nominees to be announced this week – Robert Klah
22 minutes -
Ex-Effia MP writes: Big Push for infrastructure, Small Push for people
23 minutes -
Interior Minister demands probe into GH¢3m payments made outside GIFMIS
26 minutes -
Ex-Defence Ministry procurement director to face prosecution over GH¢4.8m scandal
42 minutes -
Gov’t committed to finishing Tema Motorway by 2027, says Agbodza
48 minutes -
OSP under threat from political interference — Kissi Agyebeng calls for constitutional protection
52 minutes -
T.I. Ahmadiyya SHS, Kumasi, celebrates 75 years of excellence
1 hour -
Court orders SHS students to pay compensation for assault on teacher
1 hour -
Mahama assents to 5 bills, including key amendments on security, education and finance
1 hour -
Students of Nkwantanang M.A 6 Basic School benefit from ‘Break the Silence’ Menstrual Awareness Initiative
1 hour -
Fuel price hike exposing NDCs’ deceitful politics—Mercer
1 hour
