Audio By Carbonatix
Finance Minister, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson has advised the Bank of Ghana (BoG) to explore internal cost-cutting measures instead of relying on taxpayer funds for a GH₵53 billion bailout to address its negative equity position.
According to him, the government cannot afford to allocate such a huge sum to recapitalise the central bank at the expense of critical public services like roads, schools, and hospitals.
“I have asked the Bank of Ghana to look within and cut expenditure because the taxpayer cannot afford 53 billion Ghana cedis. I have communicated that to the governor,” Dr. Forson stated.
Speaking on JoyNews' PM Express on Tuesday, March 11, he suggested that the BoG explore alternative means of generating funds, including selling or leasing back its assets such as its newly built head office, hotels, and guest houses.
"We have seen their new head office, a very big building—they have a choice, a choice to sell and lease back if they want to. They have to look within and cut expenditure,” he suggested.
He revealed that the request for government support stems from a Memorandum of Understanding signed by the previous administration, committing taxpayers to recapitalise the BoG.
However, he stressed that the central bank must first exhaust all internal options.
“The taxpayer cannot be used as a punching bag,” he said, adding that the BoG could also consider reinvesting its profits over the next decade to restore financial stability.
When asked if the government would consider meeting the BoG halfway should they present a reasonable proposal, Dr. Forson said, “If the central bank can come to me with a reasonable offer, we can have a conversation, but it must start from them.
"I have also said that they may also consider ploughing back their profit over the next 10 years to recapitalise. That can also be done.”
Despite concerns about the bank’s financial state, he dismissed fears about its survival.
“It is not a problem; the bank can survive. What they need to do is, as soon as possible, generate enough cash to be able to run the affairs of the bank, which I believe they are doing,” he assured.
Latest Stories
-
Cagliari eye loan swoop for Ibrahim Sulemana amid Parma and Sassuolo interest
9 minutes -
Morocco beat Nigeria on penalties to set up AFCON final against Senegal
3 hours -
NaCCA Director-General apologises as withdrawn teacher manual sparks national outrage
4 hours -
Mane destroys Salah’s Afcon dream again – will he get another chance?
4 hours -
‘If Flick hadn’t come, I would have left Barca’ – Raphinha
4 hours -
Real Madrid stunned by second division Albacete in Copa del Rey
4 hours -
Tottenham sign Gallagher from Atletico for £35m
4 hours -
Amateur stuns world’s best Jannik Sinner to win A$1m in Melbourne
5 hours -
FBI searches home of Washington Post reporter in classified documents probe
5 hours -
Trump administration pauses immigrant visa processing for 75 countries
5 hours -
UK–Ghana crack down on immigration crime as fugitive smuggler jailed
5 hours -
Ghana’s Benjamin Arhin shines on Internacional debut with Man of the Match display
5 hours -
Stanbic Bank Ghana maintain top rank in Customer Experience Leadership in 2025 KPMG Assessment
6 hours -
Newmont-backed AI smart lab powers Kona D/A students to victory at Ghana Robotics Competition
6 hours -
Venezuelan acting president says hundreds of prisoners have been released since December
6 hours
