Audio By Carbonatix
Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has re-affirmed president Akufo Addo comments that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) program would end next year.
The President at a news conference on six months in office noted that the IMF program would end in April 2018 and would not be extended “there is no question about the IMF program being extended beyond April 2018, and we want to complete it and move on”.
The Finance Ministry later in a statement maintains that the president’s comments did not mean that Ghana was pulling out of the IMF program.
Responding to JOYBUSINESS’ question during a press conference by Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), the governor said, “the president said we would end the program in April 2018 and I think it’s clear to everybody.”
“The finance minister has also noted that the 2018 budget would be set under IMF program so effectively that budget that would be carried forward to 2018 would be implemented,” he added.
Monetary Targets set under the IMF program.
Dr Addison said the monetary targets that have been set under the program should be seen as the country’s own targets aimed at stabilizing the monetary space rather than something that is being pushed on them by the IMF.
“These are targets that we would have put in place with or without an IMF program,” he said.
Delays by banks in responding to policy rate cuts.
The governor noted that the challenge has come about because a lot of commercial banks had initially locked their funds into long term facilities at a higher cost.
"They need to wait for these funds to mature for the necessary re-pricing or reduction in the average cost before they can really respond to interest rate reduction," he said.
He explained that until the average cost of funds goes down, it would be difficult to witness that quick transition mechanism.
Dr Addison was however optimistic that the consistent reduction in the policy rate would influence the average cost of funds of funds for necessary adjustment to be done.
Getting tough with the banks
The governor promised that going forward the Central Bank would indeed be tough on commercial banks to ensure that the industry is sound.
He said BoG want to avoid situations where they overtake by events and prevent them to recognizing some non-performing loans in the industry.
“Going forward we hope standards would be maintained and if we do that I don’t think that we would be in a situation where we are suddenly confronted with numbers that we didn’t know we were sitting on,” he noted.
Latest Stories
-
Women’s Premier League referee allegedly assaulted during Ampem Darkoa vs Savanna match
21 minutes -
Ghana’s Daniel Laryea was the best referee at 2025 AFCON – Former Sports Minister
21 minutes -
Playing for Chelsea would be a dream – Prince Amoako Junior
28 minutes -
High sales demands force short trips, leaving commuters stranded in Accra – Drivers lament
39 minutes -
Dr Kwabena Donkor opposes fuel floor price at selected locations, calls for nationwide compliance
40 minutes -
Leadership is not about how long you have been around
54 minutes -
Arise Ghana pickets US embassy, demands Ofori-Atta’s return
59 minutes -
Not a replacement, not a fluke: Wendy Shay’s relentless climb to stardom
60 minutes -
IFC urges Ghana to sustain economic gains to boost investor confidence
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Tuesday, January 20, 2026
1 hour -
Energy Minister reviews TOR 2025 performance, sets priorities for 2026
1 hour -
Police arrest suspect over death of Nigerian singer Destiny Boy
1 hour -
The rhythms, stories, and artistes that defined Ghana music in 2025
1 hour -
Man arrested for allegedly stabbing relative in both eyes in domestic dispute
1 hour -
NSA sets January 23 deadline for 2026/2027 national service registration for nurses and midwives
1 hour
