Audio By Carbonatix
The sharp rise in Non-Performing Loans of banks in the country has been largely attributed to delays by the government to pay contractors, Alliance for Development and Industrialisation has revealed.
In a statement issued in Accra and signed by the Convener, Dr Richard Nunekpeku said “Government contracts over the years have been the largest reason for high NPLs with the banks which affected their profits".
These delayed payments by the government resulted in the closure of nine domestic banks and over 400 financial institutions, including microfinance institutions and savings and loans companies.
The Ghana banking crisis was a severe banking crisis that affected Ghana between August 2017 and January 2020. The Bank of Ghana (BoG) allowed several indigenous banks to be taken over by private companies.
“Governments over the past years award contracts but the usual characteristic of delayed payments of which some take as long as 8years to pay, damages the books and investment of banks of which most of the time the board and leaderships anticipated some profits buts get their dreams dashed whiles interest keeps piling up whiles Government struggles to make payments of which no consideration is given to the interest pileups", Alliance for Development and Industrialisation said.
It is clear that most of the banks had funded government contracts and were in anticipation of payments for which the bank of Ghana also owed it a responsibility to keep them functioning by giving them liquidity support.
Unfortunately, due to the usual politics of victimization and always shifting blame, there was empirical evaluation of the situation of which eg. evaluating the real cost of restoring the liquidity position of the banks and also addressing the lost profits of its shareholders. Just like the US did some time back under President Obama, they funded the banks under stricter supervision and made sure they recovered.
 The financial sector reforms under Mahama/Asiama would not have been closing banks and losing jobs while putting the Central Bank in unrecoverable debt. These banks would have been challenged to be productive to recover with better supervision while jobs are kept and economic growth achieved. This could have harnessed the economy to avoid any haircut.
Sadly the insensitivity of the NPP government lead such an economic calamity in 2022.
We should hail John Mahama for making sure the right thing has been done to restore the needed economic growth and welfare of the citizens
The mind boggling question to the NPP and receiver is, how much in asset wastage and true cost of the exercised has cost and we will realize that the cost of job losses, Asset Idle cost and projected returns in addition to payouts have cost the economy over GHS50billion.
Latest Stories
-
IGP Yohuno has promoted 12,802 police officers in the first six weeks of 2026
1 second -
Goldbod jewellery warns public against fake ‘Gold Investment’ schemes
17 minutes -
It’s unfortunate and disturbing – Akwatia MP reacts to ‘galamsey tax’ exposé
18 minutes -
U20 WWCQ: Black Princesses arrive in Nelspruit ahead of South Africa clash
18 minutes -
2,800 vulnerable people receive Ramadan food support in Greater Kumasi
26 minutes -
Bid launched to extend Zimbabwe president’s term in office
28 minutes -
Align domestic reforms with Pan-African goals – Armah-Kofi Buah urges African nations
28 minutes -
Ato is not ‘forcing’ for farmers—Zaato
29 minutes -
Alleged vote-buying won’t affect Baba Jamal’s chances in Ayawaso East by-election – NDC
33 minutes -
Ghana showcases mining strength and reforms at Mining Indaba 2026
33 minutes -
71% of Ghanaians worried about rising food prices, despite 68% approval for Mahama – IEA survey
37 minutes -
Antoine Semenyo enjoying ‘fairytale’ start to Manchester City career
1 hour -
Semenyo is an ‘incredible signing’ – Pep Guardiola on Ghanaian forward
1 hour -
ASID 2026: Leaders urge stronger laws to protect children online
1 hour -
Mohammed Fuseini scores in Royale Union Saint-Gilloise win over Charleroi
2 hours
