Audio By Carbonatix
Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson has rubbished claims by the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had raised concerns over the Bank of Ghana’s foreign exchange interventions.
In a sharp rebuttal during an interview on PM Express on JoyNews, Dr. Forson insisted there was “no such warning” in the IMF’s own documents and challenged the NPP to show evidence.
“I combed through the IMF staff report, and I did not see any attribution to what they claimed the IMF had said. I did not see any attribution. And so, where is this coming from?” Dr. Forson asked.
He emphasised that the narrative being pushed by the NPP, suggesting the IMF had cautioned against the Bank of Ghana’s $1.4 billion forex intervention, was completely misleading.
“I’ve not seen any attribution from the staff report where the IMF warned that the central bank is overly intervening in the market, supposedly, that is what people are made to believe. But that’s not the case. The IMF never said that,” he stated.
Dr. Forson pointed out that even after the interventions, the central bank still managed to accumulate $2.2 billion in reserves, far exceeding IMF program targets.
“After intervening, the central bank still accumulated $2.2 billion in reserves. Under the IMF program, the central bank was supposed to accumulate reserves, additional reserves, $453 million. They’ve accumulated almost $2 billion. And so what are we talking about?” he stated.
He also addressed the broader context of the interventions, referencing the Bank of Ghana’s ability to maintain and even grow foreign reserves beyond IMF benchmarks.
“Under the IMF program, you are supposed to build buffers up to three months of import cover. We have 4.8. By the end of the year, we’ll be hitting five months plus,” he said.
Defending the Gold for Reserves policy, the Finance Minister stressed that the central bank had the right to step into the market when necessary, thanks to the Ghana Gold Board.
“The essence of the Ghana Gold Board is for them to be able to buy the gold, export the gold, bring in the foreign currency to support the central bank for the central bank to be able to build reserves, and where possible, the central bank should be able to intervene when the need arises, and they are performing their mandate,” Dr. Forson explained.
The minister’s firm pushback came just hours after he presented the 2025 Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review to Parliament.
Latest Stories
-
Imprisonment should be rehabilitative, not punitive – Ghana Prisons boss at UNGA
22 minutes -
Ga Adangbe traditional priests petition Mahama over McDan aviation licence revocation
33 minutes -
Anti-LGBTQ Bill: NDC’s arrogance is worrying – Hassan Tampuli
43 minutes -
Let’s give OSP time to mature, not to scrap it – Hassan Tampuli
47 minutes -
Nigeria convicts 386 Islamist militants in mass trials
52 minutes -
Djibouti president wins election with 97.8% of vote, state media says
57 minutes -
We don’t have mandate to deduct tax from rent allowance of security services personnel – Interior Ministry clarifies
1 hour -
Ablakwa receives Presidential Special Envoy on Reparations to advance global agenda
1 hour -
Christina Koch becomes first woman to travel around the moon on Artemis II
2 hours -
Epstein survivors’ calls to meet King Charles and Queen harder to ignore as US visit approaches
2 hours -
UN Secretary-General names Ghana’s Anita Kiki Gbeho as South Sudan envoy
2 hours -
Mali withdraws recognition of Sahrawi Republic, backs Morocco’s autonomy plan
2 hours -
Gov’t distributes over 8,500 laptops to One Million Coders project
2 hours -
Julius Debrah, ‘man to beat’ as NDC’s James Agbey dismisses Musah Dankwah’s polls
2 hours -
GPRTU in Savannah Region to protest alleged eviction in Damongo
2 hours