
Audio By Carbonatix
The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has rejected claims that its foreign exchange operations created or worsened multiple currency practices, insisting the problem long predates recent reforms.
Addressing the Public Accounts Committee on Monday, January 12, Governor Dr Johnson Pandit Asiama said concerns raised by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) were not new and did not originate in 2025.
“The IMF has cited MCP issues in Ghana since the start of the ECF programme in 2023 and in prior ECF programs,” he said.
“This is not a new development and did not arise in 2025,” the Governor added.
Dr Asiama said the persistence of the IMF’s findings reflected long-standing structural weaknesses in Ghana’s foreign exchange market.
“The persistence of this finding demonstrates that there was never sustained parity between official and market exchange rates, contrary to some public claims,” he said.
He told the Committee that the Bank of Ghana had worked closely with the IMF to confront the problem rather than conceal it.
“Working closely with the IMF, the Bank of Ghana in 2025 introduced a new FX auction framework to address these long-standing structural issues,” Dr Asiama said.
He explained that the reforms were designed to promote predictability, transparency and market-based price discovery.
“The reforms focus on predictability, transparency, and market-based price discovery,” he said.
According to the Governor, the changes should not be misrepresented as evidence of intentional exchange rate manipulation.
“They are part of the solution to the IMF’s concerns, not evidence of intentional multiple exchange-rate management,” he said.
Dr Asiama also addressed public commentary surrounding the Bank’s audit processes, rejecting claims that losses had been removed from official records.
“The Bank has not instructed its auditors to remove losses from its books,” he said.
“Audited figures remain intact,” the Governor added.
He said external auditors were engaged only to validate the treatment of monetary gold and recommend governance improvements.
“Those recommendations were implemented prospectively to strengthen governance and risk management,” he said.
Dr Asiama said the Bank’s approach was guided by continuity, transparency and national interest.
“What we are seeing is the continuation of a national policy, refined as conditions evolve and strengthened in partnership with the IMF,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
NDPC discusses proposed Black Star Stadium project with Western Regional Minister
28 minutes -
NDPC begins review of planning guidelines to strengthen regional and district development coordination
32 minutes -
Russia looks to students to make up for mounting losses in Ukraine
2 hours -
Argentina survive Cabo Verde scare to book Egypt date
2 hours -
Ati-Zigi, Inaki, Opoku return as Queiroz makes four changes for Colombia clash
3 hours -
MTN Ghana Awards GH¢30,000 to SME Pitch Winners.
3 hours -
48,000 displaced by Accra floods as government scales up relief operations — Mahama
3 hours -
Declare Atewa a national park now! — Eco-Conscious Citizens
3 hours -
Accra floods: Avoid politics and help those in need – Alhaji Amin appeals for corporate support
3 hours -
This Saturday on Prime Insight: Experts to dissect national flood response and Torkonoo saga
4 hours -
Ghana Sports Fund Administrator turns 10-hour US road trip into lessons for Ghana’s sporting future
4 hours -
Sentuo Group and Eezzy Foundation donate 10 ambulances and pickup vehicles to the Ghana Police Service
5 hours -
Egypt take historic step with shootout win over Socceroos
5 hours -
The Law 101 – Supreme Court upholds constitutionality in removal of CJ Torkornoo
5 hours -
Carlos Queiroz demands courage, character against Colombia
6 hours