Audio By Carbonatix
The Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is likely to meet on January 18, 2024, to consider Ghana’s programme and possibly disbursement of the second tranche of $600 million to the country.
This was after Ghana’s bilateral creditors through the Official Creditor Committee completed work on the terms for restructuring Ghana’s debts, in what can be described as the “Term Sheet” for Ghana.
Joy Business understands that the IMF had initially proposed January 11, 2024, and January 18, 2024, depending on how negotiations at the Official Creditor Committee level goes.
Sources say the delay in the IMF Board meeting was due to the challenge in getting China to agree on some of the terms for restructuring Ghana’s debt.
Proposed terms likely to be presented by bilateral creditors
Joy Business is learning that Ghana is likely not to pay interest and principal for the next four years. Repayment of the loans will therefore commence in the fifth years.
Interest on these debts will likely be pegged between 2-3%
Will this new date materialise?
Joy Business understands that unlike previous dates, the board meeting will come on based on fresh commitments that the Fund has secured from the bilateral creditors on Ghana.
The IMF had in previous occasions told Joy Business that it will meet on Ghana’s programme once it secures the necessary financing assurance from bilateral creditors.
Sources say all the creditors have also agreed on December 2022 as the cut-off date for restructuring of Ghana’s debts.
The Official Creditor Committee is expected to send the “Letter of Comfort” or what has been described as Memorandum of Understanding to the IMF today January 12, 2024 or January 15, 2024. This will then help the board to go ahead and meet on Ghana’s programme.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta, had told Bloomberg that Ghana has received a draft term sheet on debt relief from its official creditors that is sufficient for the International Monetary Fund to disburse $600 million.
“We are reviewing the draft term sheet,” Mr. Ofori-Atta said in an interview in the capital, Accra, declining to provide details in the draft accord.
What next?
If the IMF is able to receive the MoU from the Official Creditor Committee on January 12, 2024, its board will go ahead and meet on Ghana and review the country’s performance under the IMF programme and approve the disbursement of some $600 million to Ghana. The funds will likely be credited to the Bank of Ghana’s accounts maximum five days.
Meanwhile, Joy Business cannot independently confirm whether Ghana has accepted all the proposed debt restructuring terms.
Latest Stories
-
ORC begins enforcement of GH¢500 penalty for failure to file beneficial ownership information
4 minutes -
GRA assures it will meet GH¢225bn target for 2026 despite tax reform concerns
12 minutes -
Ofori-Atta Saga : Ex-appointees must face probes when invited – John Darko
18 minutes -
Haruna Mohammed rules out removal of names from NPP album
20 minutes -
Volta House of Chiefs nullifies enstoolment of Roland Adiko as paramount chief of Tanyigbe, affirms rotational succession
21 minutes -
FACT CHECK: Kennedy Agyapong’s claim that Adenta is a traditional NPP seat and that Bawumia did not campaign there is false
21 minutes -
Iran: Videos from mortuary show how deadly protests have become
24 minutes -
Over 2,000 screened as Ashanti Region Police recruitment exercise progresses
34 minutes -
Mallam Market chaos: Traders flout rules, crippling Accra-Kasoa Highway
34 minutes -
Preparations for NPP presidential primaries nearly complete — Haruna Mohammed
51 minutes -
AFCON 2025: the dominance of African coaches
54 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
1 hour -
Western North NPP raises alarm over cocoa sector neglect, cites lack of funds and jute sacks
2 hours
