Audio By Carbonatix
The Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta has said that the debt exchange programme is a voluntary exercise.
Mr Ofori-Atta said government anticipates an 80% per cent success rate.
He noted that the percentage will be enough to keep the economy stable.
According to him, he has chanced “on dramatic videos as if the programme has already commenced” but it has not, adding that "it is a voluntary exercise."
He made these remarks during a meeting with individual bondholders on Wednesday.
The Finance Minister gave the assurance that Ghanaians' welfare would be considered in arriving at a final decision on the programme.
“It is a voluntary programme and the expectation is that we have an 80 percent participation and so, that should be factual for everybody,” he noted.
Mr Ofori-Atta, however, stated that the programme must be done.
“.. we’ve been talking to the unions etc. There are issues of structural changes that must happen, there are medium and long term issues that we must contend with, but the debt programme we must do,” he said.
The debt exchange programme was introduced to ensure the country’s debts are sustainable.
But it has seen a mass rejection from bondholders demanding an exemption from the programme.
Meanwhile, Finance Minister has insisted that there is no alternative to the Debt Exchange programme, but is promising to deal with some of the concerns of individual bondholders and pensioners.
Speaking on a yet-to-be-aired episode of PM Express Business Edition, Mr Ofori-Atta promised that his outfit will deal with some of the concerns of individual bondholders and pensioners.
He told George Wiafe that “we have a situation where our debt exchange is necessary… we have a situation where we have come out of certain formulations and we have gone ahead to discuss or the financial institutions that way to mitigate that. I think we’ve done that successfully.”
“In the same way, we sat with the unions, pensions, and I think we are making great progress in what we do for them. In the same way in which we are looking at individual bondholders to see how we can tweak this. Would we lose a bit of what we have? I think all of us are going to. But we have to make sure that what we eventually come up with will create a sustainability,” he explained.
Latest Stories
-
Police declare suspect wanted over double murder near Tema Golf City
3 minutes -
Two BECE candidates injured in Nkwanta South accident, return to sit exams
9 minutes -
Climate change is a national development challenge – Issifu Seidu
13 minutes -
Twins among four nabbed for BECE exam malpractice during Science paper
19 minutes -
BoG has no separate financial stability committee to check system risks – IMF
22 minutes -
CDD, IMANI, 12 other CSOs file to join Supreme Court case challenging OSP Act
40 minutes -
Africa must shape the future of global finance, not just follow — BoG Governor
41 minutes -
Ghana to host landmark global conference on reparatory justice following historic UN resolution
41 minutes -
The price of stability : Why Bank of Ghana is breaking its balance sheet to save your bread
46 minutes -
Africa must move beyond payments to unlock next phase of digital finance – BoG Governor
49 minutes -
BoG pushes Africa beyond digital payments as fintech regulation drive deepens
57 minutes -
Human-to-human hantavirus transmission suspected on board stranded cruise ship, WHO says
58 minutes -
Payments, identity, regulation and infrastructure key to Africa’s digital integration – Vice President
1 hour -
“Northern Ghana not a punishment ground” — Bernard Mornah demands Ocloo’s resignation over posting remarks
1 hour -
China calls for Strait to be reopened ‘as soon as possible’ in Iran talks
1 hour