Audio By Carbonatix
An International Development Expert, Dr Ishmael Hlovor has advised government to lower its expectations ahead of the meeting with China.
Reports indicate that a high-powered government delegation is expected to travel to China to appeal for a possible relief from the $1.7 billion debt.
Dr Hlovor believes that if China would agree to give the country some debt relief, it would be on their terms.
“Over the years, if you look at the Chinese debt cancellation and restructuring, they normally do it on their own terms. “Even if we are able to make contact with the Chinese officials, we must remember that China does not operate within the G20 framework where there are clearly laid down rules and structures for debt cancellation and debt forgiveness,” he said.
Speaking in an interview with JoyNews’ Blessed Sogah on The Pulse, on what Ghana should expect ahead of its meeting, he explained that it might be difficult for China to clear Ghana’s debt since it might alter other financial deals with other countries.
“Remember China as a lender has lent to so many developing countries and therefore any debt restructuring agreement with any of these debtor nations will automatically translate into you coming to agree to a similar term in other nations so we must put all these variables together,” he said on Tuesday.
Dr Hlovor stressed that although China in the past was seen to have cancelled debts of countries, “most of the debts they have cancelled are debts that are zero interest loans which are nearing maturation.
“In 2019 for instance, about 27 countries' debt were cancelled. But if you scrutinise those loans, they were those loans that are getting to maturation and there is something small left on them, but our situation is a little bit complicated because of commercial lending,” he added.
Ghana has set up a committee which all its creditors are members except China, the country's biggest creditor.
This, government fears, might derail its progress and subsequently hinder the process of getting signed on an International Monetary Fund programme.
Attempting to explain the reason for China’s absence from the committee, the Development Expert said February is a period the country took time off business engagements for family commitments.
Latest Stories
-
Army leadership hails troops, unity and security gains at 2025 WASSA
2 minutes -
Ghana-Nigeria trade rift looms amid legal dispute – UK Certified Customer Communication and Marketer warns
8 minutes -
Prudential Life joins education stakeholders to encourage financial literacy in education curriculum
17 minutes -
‘Next of kin’ does not grant inheritance rights – Lawyer
48 minutes -
BoG Governor says reforms will shield Ghana from another financial meltdown
55 minutes -
BoG to shift banking supervision to risk-based model – Governor outlines strategy for 2026
1 hour -
BoG Governor targets 10% NPL ratio by end of 2026
1 hour -
Nicki Minaj surprises conservatives with praise for Trump, Vance at Arizona event
2 hours -
‘The Wire,’ actor James Ransone dies by apparent suicide at 46
2 hours -
Bristol University threatened with legal action after protest at academic’s talk
2 hours -
US launches review of advanced Nvidia AI chip sales to China, sources say
2 hours -
2 nurses, security guard arrested over alleged baby theft at Tamale hospital
2 hours -
Elon Musk becomes first person worth $700 billion following pay package ruling
3 hours -
Fussy eaters and TV remote hogs: How to avoid family rows over Christmas
3 hours -
Singing at school shouldn’t just be for Christmas, teachers say
3 hours
