Audio By Carbonatix
An African Union-backed agency, African Peer Review Mechanism, has urged Moody’s Investors Service to review an appeal by government against the rating agency’s downgrade of the country’s credit rating.
Moody’s reviewed Ghana’s long-term debt to Caa1, from B3 on Friday, 4th February, 2022.
To this end, the Finance Ministry on Sunday, 6th February, 2022 criticised Moody’s decision to lower its rating further into junk status and described the rating as questionable because of the incomplete data used.
“Taking such a major rating decision that threatens debt sustainability of the country should be treated with seriousness,” the African Peer Review Mechanism said in a statement on its website.
“Moody’s have failed to do that”, it added.
Finance Ministry appeals against Moody’s downgrade of Ghana’s rating
The Finance Ministry on Sunday 6th February, 2022, appealed against the downgrade of the country’s credit rating to Caa1, from B3 by Moody’s.
It cited the omission of key material information from the assumptions driving some of Moody’s forecasts and projections such as the 2022 budget expenditure control measures, the 2022 upfront fiscal adjustments and inaccurate balance of payment statistics as well as the appointment of a new primary credit analyst, only four weeks prior to such a major credit rating decision as the major reasons.
It also questioned the committee’s refusal to consider deferring such a monumental rating action until the analyst had enough time to more fully understand both the quantitative and qualitative aspects of the Ghana credit story.
In a statement, it said the government of Ghana is completely puzzled by the decision to downgrade Ghana’s credit rating to Caa1, despite the series of progressive engagements it had with the team from Moody’s, the quality of the data supplied, as well as the medium-term economic and fiscal focus of the government, underpinned by key fiscal consolidation reforms such as the policy decision to cut expenditure by 20%, as recently announced by the Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta.
Latest Stories
-
Harry says he was made ‘paranoid’ by Daily Mail publisher’s ‘unlawful’ actions
2 hours -
Trade war in no-one’s interest, says British PM in face of Trump threats
2 hours -
Greenland ‘will stay Greenland’, former Trump adviser declares
2 hours -
I do not want to reconcile with my family, says Brooklyn Peltz Beckham
2 hours -
Djokovic registers 100th Australian Open win
3 hours -
China’s birth rate hits record low as population continues to shrink
3 hours -
US believes its power matters more than international law, UN chief tells BBC
3 hours -
2028 is not a normal election – Amewu explains why NPP needs Kennedy Agyapong
3 hours -
The whole nation wants Kennedy – Amewu makes strong case for Agyapong
3 hours -
Sogakope Circuit Court jails farmer 15 years for incest, defilement
4 hours -
31-year-old illegal miner sent to prison over theft
4 hours -
Court remands GPHA staff over stolen tugboat
4 hours -
Attendance at trial is a constitutional duty, not an option
5 hours -
RTI response raises questions over Bryan Acheampong’s military service claims
5 hours -
Two women granted bail over assault of 12-year-old; another remanded
5 hours
