Audio By Carbonatix
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has revealed that Ghana’s fiscal performance is on track to achieve a primary surplus of half percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) on a commitment basis.
This is despite emerging spending pressures stemming from a recent dry spell and challenges in the energy sector.
It is coming after the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has completed the third review of Ghana’s 36-month Extended Credit Facility Arrangement.
Looking ahead, the IMF said the Ghanaian authorities are committed to further advancing fiscal consolidation by attaining a primary fiscal surplus of 1½ percent of GDP in 2025 through additional domestic revenue mobilization and non-priority expenditure rationalisation, while expanding social programmes to cushion the vulnerable from the impact of policy adjustment.
It added that “Continued fiscal consolidation and discipline are predicated on timely and continued efforts to modernise Ghana’s fiscal responsibility framework, strengthen revenue administration, bolster public financial management, and improve SOEs [State Owned Enterprises] management, including to tackle challenges in the energy and cocoa sectors”.
Furthermore, the Fund, said the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has maintained a prudent monetary policy stance to sustain a continued reduction in inflation against heightened risks and has taken important steps to rebuild international reserves.
“The BoG has also appropriately strengthened measures to buttress financial sector stability by intensifying actions to promote timely recapitalization and steps to sustain the viability of banks. The government has started recapitalizing state-owned banks consistent with available resources”.
“Ambitious structural reforms to help create an environment more conducive to private sector investment, and to enhance governance and transparency remain key to boosting the economy’s potential and underpinning sustainable job creation”, it mentioned.
IMF Board approves $360m bailout package for Ghana
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed the third review of Ghana’s 36-month Extended Credit Facility Arrangement.
This allows for the immediate disbursement of SDR 269.1 million (about US$360 million) to the country.
The Fund said Ghana's policy and reform efforts under the IMF-supported programme have continued to deliver encouraging results.
Latest Stories
-
JoyNews checks reveal massive destruction of Oda forest reserve as chiefs call for immediate action
11 minutes -
Ghana officially launches e-visa system, scraps visa fees for Africans — Ablakwa
17 minutes -
Abrupt changes to US green card process trigger widespread confusion and anxiety
30 minutes -
‘I’m excited for their future’ – Boye-Hlorkah impressed by Black Maidens after Liberia win
36 minutes -
Uganda’s Ghetto Kids to perform with Shakira at 2026 FIFA World Cup halftime show
38 minutes -
Senegal president’s dissolution of government signals high-stakes pivot to IMF
44 minutes -
Senegal’s leadership row mounts as parliament speaker resigns
50 minutes -
Respect rule of law, protect rights to safeguard democracy — Abu Jinapor
51 minutes -
Clashes as Venezuelan prisoners protest over alleged mistreatment
52 minutes -
My mission is to rebuild NPP around its founding values — Richard Ahiagbah
53 minutes -
Indian billionaires buy foreign companies as growth slows at home
56 minutes -
We’ll support 24-hour economy if it is properly structured — Baffour Awuah
1 hour -
Kenya police shake up president’s protection team after security breach
1 hour -
2026 World Cup: Lamine Yamal leads Spain squad for tournament
1 hour -
At least 19 people taken to hospital after ‘strong smell’ reported at Tokyo mall
1 hour