Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana’s import bill on 14 items reached approximately $2.6 billion in 2021. These items include fake hair (wigs), rice, brooms, use clothing, brooms and other 10 products.
JoyNews’ checks from the OEC trade data repository reveal the country in 2021 spent more than half a billion dollar on rice importation, more than $400 on poultry meat and close to $290 million on palm oil.
Here are the 14 products and their associated import bill
Recently Ghana's Trade Ministry tried to put in place a legislation to restrict the importation of some items.
The Government of Ghana on Thursday made a surprising suspension of the decision to put the L.I. before parliament, which sought to place the importation of 22 listed products under restrictions. It had tried on three occasions, without success, to lay the bill before the house.
The Minority in Parliament urged President Akufo-Addo to immediately withdraw the regulation seeking to restrict the importation of rice, cement, fish, sugar, guts, bladders, and animal stomachs, known as 'yemuadie'.
The Trade Minister, K.T Hammond, who was pushing this regulation hoped it would help the cedi appreciate as well as help grow local industries.
Per the proposed regulation, any person seeking to import the selected products would have been required to obtain permission from the Trade Minister.
Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has made it clear to the Government of Ghana that it cannot impose or intensify import restrictions for balance of payments purposes.
This is an agreement contained in the IMF bailout package which has pledged to support Ghana’s balance of payment with some $3 billion between 2023 and 2026.
“No imposition or intensification of import restrictions for balance of payments reasons”, the Fund stressed on page 76 of the programme document. Amongst other things, there are four decisions the Government of Ghana cannot take while it is still under the IMF programme. These decisions align with performance criteria common to all Fund arrangements, which include:
- No imposition or intensification of restrictions on making payments and transfers for current international transactions.
- No introduction or modification of multiple currency practices.
- No conclusion of bilateral payments agreements inconsistent with Article VIII of the IMF Articles of Arrangement.
- No imposition or intensification of import restrictions for balance of payments reasons.
The Fund emphasised that these four performance criteria will be monitored continuously.
Latest Stories
-
Hearts pip Nations F.C. to keep pressure on Medeama
33 minutes -
I quit smoking because I’m asthmatic – Reggie Rockstone
1 hour -
GPL 25/26: Salim Adams inspires Medeama SC to Crucial 2-0 win over Bibiani Gold Stars
1 hour -
2025/26 Ghana League: Aduana’s title push falters after stalemate with Heart of Lions
2 hours -
Kasapreko reports GH₵73m profit for Q1 2026
2 hours -
Prestea Huni-Valley assembly appeals for replacement of broken-down skip truck as parliamentary committee reviews sanitation services
2 hours -
Minority caucus ‘strips BoG naked’ over losses, accuses NDC of hiding true financial Ccrisis
2 hours -
PURC resolves 98.6% of utility complaints in Volta/Oti as service concerns surge
2 hours -
Invest in power systems security architecture for reliable electricity supply – Energy expert urges gov’t
2 hours -
Pastor Ansah: Ghana’s TikTok sensation blending pulpit and humour
2 hours -
From Aid to Autonomy: Why Ghana must build self-reliance through health, research, and mining-led industrialisation
2 hours -
“Do Better” — Azamati criticizes Sports Ministry after historic relay feat
3 hours -
Abdul Rasheed Saminu slams Ghana Sports Ministry over travel arrangements after World Relays success
3 hours -
It will be a beautiful story if Wendy Shay wins TGMA Artiste of the Year – Reggie Rockstone
3 hours -
NAIMOS bust galamsey syndicate at Ntabanu and Nyameadom, 7 arrested
3 hours