Audio By Carbonatix
The Christian Council of Ghana says government's Debt Exchange programme will have an impact on the tithes and offerings of congregants.
According to the General Secretary of the Council, the programme will pose economic challenges for their congregants.
Reverend Dr Cyril Fayose, who spoke in an interview with Blessed Sogah on The Pulse on Thursday, therefore reiterated the Council's call for government to suspend the implementation of the said programme.
Responding to whether the policy will affect collections or not, he said, "Definitely. If members cannot get their coupons [and] cannot make ends meet, it will affect the tithing and also the offering.
"So it's important that we fight for them, so that we also get our share of the tithe".
The comments by the Christian leader follow a release issued by the Christian Council in which it urged government to suspend the Debt Exchange programme.
In the statement on Thursday, the Council said there is the need for government to engage more stakeholders on the subject matter.
The Council also wants the January 31 deadline suspended for government to rather propose a roadmap for dialogue.
This they say will enable a participatory process such that the outcome would be a consensus from both sides.
The statement added that a thorough engagement with stakeholders would help government to appreciate the concerns of the affected individuals and institutions to allow for measures to be outlined to address the challenges.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Finance has set up a technical committee to further engage individual bondholders on their inclusion in the debt exchange programme.
This follows a closed-door meeting with leaders of the Individual Bondholders Forum on Wednesday to facilitate engagement on the programme.
During the meeting on Wednesday, the Minister said the 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.
The Minister also disclosed that government will grant some concessions to individual bondholders under the Programme.
He, however, ruled out any move to abolish the programme or grant total exemption to individual bondholders.
“We are looking at a situation where maybe the zero coupon for bondholders in 2023 should be changed going forward”, he said in a yet-to-air interview with Joy Business’ George Wiafe.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana Tourism Federation appoints Emmanuel Treku as Chair of Marketing and Public Relations Directorate
15 seconds -
Why your light bills are up amidst strong cedi and lower petrol prices
5 minutes -
University of Gold Coast welcomes new MBA students with exclusive networking event
18 minutes -
PwC West Africa Outlook: Nigeria and Ghana chart different pathways from stability to growth in 2026
27 minutes -
Bank of Ghana’s Critical Role in Inflation Management: Assessing BoG’s 2024 annual report & progress made so far
28 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Thursday, February 5, 2026
41 minutes -
Togolese Armed Forces Intelligence pays visit to GAF
42 minutes -
Falling inflation doesn’t reflect reality of hardship– Kwadwo Poku
43 minutes -
Retraction and clarification on airport renaming comment
47 minutes -
AGOA one-year extension shields thousands of Jobs – Trade Minister
58 minutes -
Ghana Prisons Council engages Interior Minister on collaboration and operational support
1 hour -
Trade Ministry claims diplomatic victory as U.S. extends AGOA for Ghana
1 hour -
Author Ralph appointed to lead Global Youth Network of World Conference of Mayors
1 hour -
My gov’t inherited a fragile economy and failing governance system – Mahama
2 hours -
Ghana to establish first modern fire assay laboratory to boost gold value chain – Ato Forson
2 hours
