Audio By Carbonatix
A professor of Finance and Economics at the University of Ghana has criticised government’s approach to fiscal discipline, warning that Ghana’s economic problems require decisive spending, not celebration of restraint.
Charles Godfred Ackah, speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express Business Edition on Thursday, questioned the logic behind what government touts as prudent financial management.
“Well, fiscal discipline is good if it’s defined as a way of reducing waste of resources, corruption, and then improving on expense efficiency, then it’s good,” he said.
“But if fiscal discipline means that you should run a budget surplus as a developing country that has so much waste, so much idle resources, manpower, resources wasting… then no.”
According to him, the nation cannot afford to boast about spending cuts when critical sectors are starved of funds and infrastructure remains poor across the country.
“People have finished university in five years, six years not getting jobs, nurses are sitting at home, teachers are still home, universities cannot employ lecturers when there are so many students, and roads are terrible from here to Kumasi and all over the country,” he pointed out.
“You need to invest in infrastructure. You need to invest in the productive capacity of the country.”
Prof. Ackah insists the conversation should not be about achieving a budget surplus at all costs, but about channelling spending into projects that directly address the country’s economic stagnation.
“If that means you must run a reasonable budget deficit and… this budget deficit is going into investing… even in the private sector, or have households and individuals… to invest in real estate, to invest in businesses, then that’s not imprudence,” he said.
He dismissed any narrative that prioritises fiscal tightening while leaving behind the urgency of job creation, public sector enhancement, and infrastructure delivery.
He noted that deficit spending can be justified if it leads to tangible development outcomes.
“So if we are borrowing from the central bank, or borrowing from Treasury, even external borrowing… and it’s not for salaries and wages, it’s not for buying V8 to run high budget deficits that you don’t see any value for… and it’s to invest in the economy, particularly infrastructure, which is terrible across the country… then that’s what we should be doing.”
He cited examples of developed nations like the U.S., Malaysia, and Singapore that continue to run budget deficits to power their economies.
“Even America is running a budget deficit, Malaysia, Singapore—tell me how many countries in the world run a budget surplus. So why will a poor country like us seem to be happy that you are cutting your coat according to your cloth? What does that mean?”
He challenged government to ask whether the core problems confronting the country—healthcare, unemployment, poor pay, inflation—have been resolved before celebrating budget cuts.
“Have you finished solving our infrastructure problems? By the way, you can check and see that we have so many problems, and we need to invest. Government needs to spend.
"The private sector needs to spend. The government needs to spend to crowd in the private sector. And that is not happening.”
Prof. Ackah emphasised that no amount of fiscal restraint can justify the neglect of critical social investments and economic stimulation.
“Go to hospitals. There are no beds, and people are dying in the hospitals. There are a lot of challenges—even wages, which are lagging behind labour productivity,” he said.
“Look at the average salary paid to public sector earners. Look at inflation, look at the cost of rent, look at the cost of food. And people are being paid ¢1,000 and ¢1,200 after graduating from the university.”
He concluded with a sharp rebuke of what he sees as misplaced priorities.
“So if all of these things are problems to solve, and the government sit down and says why we are trying to be disciplined, I don’t know what that means.”
Latest Stories
-
Ghana to roll out national AI strategy on April 24, $250m AI centre approved
6 minutes -
Okyeame Kwame to build paediatric centre at Manhyia Hospital to mark 50th birthday
10 minutes -
Iran war economic shocks will last ‘months’, says Australia’s PM
15 minutes -
Gov’t can cushion fuel consumers without derailing budget – Bokpin
23 minutes -
Autism awareness event held to mark World Autism Day on April 2
24 minutes -
Okyenhene bans burial in private homes, tasks MMDCEs to enforce laws
27 minutes -
Power outage in Accra West and scheduled maintenance in Ashanti Region
31 minutes -
Life is consequences – Counselor Perfect on confession, infidelity and difficult choices
37 minutes -
Global renewable energy jumps by 692GW in 2025, strengthening energy security – IRENA Report
42 minutes -
PAC summons 2 over GH₵8.2m ‘Toilet for All’ payments without work done
54 minutes -
Calls for practical, collective leadership on food security intensify ahead of 34th FAO Regional Conference
1 hour -
IMANI uncovers SIGA-backed push to concentrate public sector insurance business with SIC
1 hour -
Prof Bokpin backs calls for gov’t to cut fuel levies
1 hour -
We shouldn’t be quick to remove taxes on fuel – Joe Jackson
1 hour -
Betrayal in Accra: Ghana’s Pact with Brussels Stabs Pan-Africanism in the Back
1 hour
