Audio By Carbonatix
The Dean of the University of Ghana’s Law Faculty, Professor Raymond Atuguba, has warned that the economy is heading for some difficult period if something radical is not done immediately to rescue it.
Speaking at a public lecture on a review of the 1992 Constitution and its impact on the economy, he noted that Ghana’s current financial state is a threat to its democracy.
He noted that studies have confirmed that an ailing economy facilitates all successful coup d’états in the sub-region.
“A big part of why certain coups succeed and others fail is the economy. What is the state of Ghana’s economy today?
“At the level of the most irreducible idiomaticity, Ghana is broke. Your nation is radically broke. So broke, the Speaker of Parliament has publicly warned, gavel in hand, that we may not be able to pay the salaries of public sector workers in the next three months,” the academic said.
For him, passing the controversial Electronic Transaction Levy (E-levy) Bill is one of the concrete steps to prevent a coup and the economy's collapse.
Although he described the tax policy with swear words, he noted that funds generated from this taxation will be the country’s saviour.
“We need to pass the damn 'farah f*&king' [sic] E-levy Bill immediately and implement it effectively.
“However, to prevent the collapse of the economy and a return to the stranglehold of the IFIs [International Financial Institutions], we have no choice but to pass it,” he stressed.
Prof Atuguba, however, cautioned government to stop “lying” to the citizenry.
He noted that the Akufo-Addo administration must “come clean and confess that you had thought the managing of the economy was simple.”
“Ghanaians are smart and empathetic and will gladly support the E-levy if this is done right,” he added.
Meanwhile, the Deputy Finance Minister, John Kumah, has rejected claims that government will be unable to pay public sector workers in the next three months.
According to him, there is no problem with government's liquidity in the short term.
But he added that if the E-levy is not passed, it could be a challenge in the long term.
Latest Stories
-
Pursue Sedinam Tamakloe first before Ofori-Atta – Frank Davies accuses gov’t of double standards
47 seconds -
TUC, PUWU pushes back against ECG, NEDCo privatisation
2 minutes -
Prof. Opoku-Agyemang courts private sector support for Free Sanitary Pad Initiative
5 minutes -
Michael Carrick: Man Utd reach agreement with ex-midfielder to take over at Old Trafford until the summer
12 minutes -
I’ve not signed or cancelled any number plate contracts — DVLA Boss
25 minutes -
Offinso crash death toll rises to three
27 minutes -
BBC seeks dismissal of Trump’s $5bn defamation lawsuit
36 minutes -
We did international activations ahead of December in Ghana 2025 – Abeiku Aggrey
39 minutes -
‘Have GH¢100,000 or don’t wed’: Duncan-Williams slams lavish weddings
40 minutes -
Decision time for Trump on Iran but what does he ultimately want?
43 minutes -
‘They just kept killing’: Eyewitnesses describe deadly crackdown in Iran
44 minutes -
Armwrestling: Ghana confirmed to host 15th Africa Armwrestling Championship in April 2026
44 minutes -
Supreme Court defers ruling on Kpandai by-election to January 28
44 minutes -
IBF congratulates John Laryea on Continental Africa Featherweight triumph
48 minutes -
Ofori-Atta is embarrassing Ghana, says Martin Kpebu
54 minutes
