Audio By Carbonatix
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, has stated that many central banks incurred losses as a result of the impact of Covid-19 pandemic and the Russian/Ukraine war on their respective economies.
Citing examples such as the Bank of Jamaica, the central banks of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, the Philippines, Singapore, Turkey, and UK, he also said historically, some central banks have operated with negative equity as a result of losses yet fully met their policy objectives, as long as they remain policy solvent.
In an article “Standing strong with the Central Bank”, Mr. Ofori-Atta pointed out that the pandemic and Russia-Ukraine war have reinforced and increased the number of central banks that have moved into negative equity and have thrown light into this ‘new normal.’
“Thus, the Central Banks of Chile, Czech Republic, Israel and Mexico have experienced years of negative equity. The Reserve Bank of Australia fell into negative equity in 2022 due to valuation losses on its bond holdings, and the bank stressed that it will not affect its mandate or operational efficiency. And unheard of in the modern financial setup, the German central bank, that citadel of fiscal purity, recorded a loss in 2022”, he added.
Furthermore, he pointed out that the US Federal Reserve Bank in April 2022 also declared a negative equity position, on account of the rapid rise in rates that began in 2022, renewed interest expenses on commercial bank reserves deposits, and low income on its security holdings, including US Government securities.
“In fact, as indicated by the Brookings Institution, “the Fed’s cumulative losses came to more than $52 billion as at the end of April 2022, exceeding its paid-in capital and surplus, and in effect, leaving it in negative equity.”
(I cite these examples just to make the point that hitherto unheard of things have been happening in central banks around the world recently.)”, he stressed
Accordingly, Mr. Ofori-Atta said as the focus shifts from direct targets of money supply to interest rates as operational targets, the framework for analysing central bank balance sheets has shifted, enabling central banks to play more interventionist roles in the economy than before.
Latest Stories
-
Western Regional House of Chiefs inducts Shamamanhene as member
5 seconds -
GHAMRO distributes GH₵856,700 December royalties
1 minute -
Black Queens are ‘doing extremely well’ – Björkegren on 2025 year review
3 minutes -
Act 1122 reshapes GSA as Prof Gyampo outlines tough discipline, cost reforms and 2026 priorities
7 minutes -
Ghana gets $10.5m for qualifying for World Cup 2026
9 minutes -
GHAMRO explains GH¢123.82 royalty payment to Fancy Gadam
9 minutes -
PPI for November 2025 falls to 12.3%
9 minutes -
Techiman police arrest 25 in major swoop; drugs seized
17 minutes -
Love in marriage goes beyond sex – Rev. Daniel Annan
17 minutes -
GSA records major regulatory, infrastructure gains under Prof. Gyampo’s leadership
18 minutes -
Housing remains central to my reset agenda – Mahama
19 minutes -
You’re not a presidential material – Atta-Akyea to Ken Agyapong
25 minutes -
All set for the ultimate Boxing Day hangout: Joy FM Family Party in the Park is almost here
27 minutes -
Western Region chiefs push for full rubber export ban, say restrictions are not enough
28 minutes -
Ghana’s Rice Story: Where we are, what must change, and why it matters to all of us
40 minutes
