Audio By Carbonatix
The Finance Ministry has announced the passage of the Public Financial Management (Amendment) Act, 2025, a landmark legislation aimed at bolstering fiscal discipline, accountability, and ensuring long-term economic stability in Ghana.
This comprehensive reform introduces stricter oversight mechanisms, enforces rigorous fiscal responsibility rules, and establishes an independent Fiscal Council to enhance transparency and compliance.
Key Reforms Introduced by the PFM (Amendment) Act, 2025:
1. Enhanced Sanctions for Fiscal Mismanagement:
• The Minister of Finance faces censure under Article 82 of the Constitution for any breaches of fiscal rules.
• Ministers of State and Heads of Covered Entities are subject to potential imprisonment for actions contributing to fiscal slippages.
2. New Fiscal Responsibility Measures:
• Implementation of a primary balance rule mandating an annual surplus of at least 1.5% of GDP on a commitment basis.
• Establishment of a public debt ceiling, capping the debt-to-GDP ratio at 45% by 2034 to ensure debt sustainability.
3. Creation of an Independent Fiscal Council:
• A legislated, autonomous Fiscal Council tasked with monitoring adherence to fiscal responsibility rules, thereby ensuring budget credibility and macroeconomic stability.
4. Strengthened Oversight and Accountability:
• Requirement for the Minister of Finance to obtain Parliamentary or Cabinet approval before suspending fiscal rules due to force majeure or unforeseen economic conditions.
5. Consolidation of Fiscal Management Laws:
• Unification of all fiscal rules under a single legal framework, eliminating redundancies and enhancing enforcement mechanisms.
With the enactment of this law, the Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2018 (Act 982) has been repealed, and the Presidential Fiscal Advisory Council dissolved, streamlining oversight under the newly established independent Fiscal Council.
The passage of these critical reforms, well ahead of the September 2025 deadline for the IMF-supported program, demonstrates the Ministry of Finance’s unwavering commitment to restoring fiscal discipline, enhancing transparency, and securing Ghana’s long-term economic resilience.
The Ministry remains dedicated to ensuring full implementation of these laws and will collaborate closely with all stakeholders to uphold Ghana’s macroeconomic stability and prosperity.
Latest Stories
-
ORC begins enforcement of GH¢500 penalty for failure to file beneficial ownership information
7 minutes -
GRA assures it will meet GH¢225bn target for 2026 despite tax reform concerns
14 minutes -
Ofori-Atta Saga : Ex-appointees must face probes when invited – John Darko
20 minutes -
Haruna Mohammed rules out removal of names from NPP album
23 minutes -
Volta House of Chiefs nullifies enstoolment of Roland Adiko as paramount chief of Tanyigbe, affirms rotational succession
23 minutes -
FACT CHECK: Kennedy Agyapong’s claim that Adenta is a traditional NPP seat and that Bawumia did not campaign there is false
24 minutes -
Iran: Videos from mortuary show how deadly protests have become
26 minutes -
Over 2,000 screened as Ashanti Region Police recruitment exercise progresses
36 minutes -
Mallam Market chaos: Traders flout rules, crippling Accra-Kasoa Highway
36 minutes -
Preparations for NPP presidential primaries nearly complete — Haruna Mohammed
54 minutes -
AFCON 2025: the dominance of African coaches
56 minutes -
31 granted bail over illegal mining in Apramprama forest reserve
1 hour -
Son of Iran’s exiled late monarch urges supporters to replace embassy flags
1 hour -
Gold Empire Resources applauds gov’t crackdown on illegal mining; calls for prosecution of financiers and sponsors
2 hours -
Western North NPP raises alarm over cocoa sector neglect, cites lack of funds and jute sacks
2 hours
