Audio By Carbonatix
The opposition party in Parliament has promised to trigger a confidence vote against the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, over what it says are high fiscal deficit figures.
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) MPs claim the Minister wants to deliberately manipulate government’s spending figures to stay within the accepted limit.
Per the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, a Finance Minister should not superintend a fiscal deficit which exceeds 5 per cent lest he be censored.
Speaking to Joy FM’s Top Story Monday, Minority spokesperson on Finance, Cassiel Ato Forson, claims the only thing Mr Ofori-Atta is trying to avoid is the censorship, the reason he is manipulating the figures.
Mr Forson said the Minority MPs are going to reject the figures Mr Ofori-Atta will present when he appears in the House to present the 2020 budget statement on Wednesday.
“He should prepare because he has already exceeded that 5 per cent,” the Ajumako Enyan Essiam MP charged, adding they will invoke the law to boot him out of office.
What are the claims?
Mr Forson argues that the government has decided not to treat monies used in the banking sector clean up as expenditure has decided to treat monies gained from it as revenue.
This, the opposition legislator, who has served as a Deputy Finance Minister, describes as cosmetic accounting.
Finance Minister will present 'cooked up' figures on Nov 13 - Minority claims
He said the government must be consistent in its dealings with monies spent and gained from the clean-up otherwise it amounts to a manipulation of figures “just to look good.”
The mining companies
The Minority also claims to the government is prevailing upon mining companies in the country to undertake some development projects in their resident communities.
The government of Ghana would be expected to pay back these monies in issued bonds.
Chief Executive of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, Sulemana Konney has, however, disputed this.
According to him, there have been talks with the government but no decision has been reached and no official proposal has come to them.
The Minority MPs are, however, not convinced.
They believe the government is simply attempting to use the mining companies to raise revenue without recording it in their expenditure.
When this happens the expenditure looks good but the country’s debt increases on the blindside, Ato Forson explained.
He says their aside of the aisle would fight the Minister’s attempts and unless he meets their demands -- to classify the fiscal deficit properly -- on Wednesday, they would move to impeach him.
Latest Stories
-
Kantamanto Market traders get reduced GHC100 operating permit from AMA for 2026
12 minutes -
Rotary Club of Accra-Odadee AOGA marks 2nd anniversary with donations to mothers, hospitals
21 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, May 25, 2026
37 minutes -
Afoko to NPP MPs: Let’s return the party to winning ways
1 hour -
Djokovic shakes off rust to sidestep Mpetshi Perricard
1 hour -
Nigeria’s Tinubu to run for second term after party primary win
1 hour -
Benin’s Wadagni takes office, vows better living standards, security
2 hours -
BoG awaits legal advice on next steps after court orders restoration of GN Savings and Loans licence
2 hours -
South Africa: First batch of Ghanaians set to arrive on Wednesday – Ghana’s envoy confirms
2 hours -
The Eagles of Carthage: Discipline, defiance, and a defining moment
2 hours -
Rubio says US will find ‘another way’ if Iran talks fail
2 hours -
China’s Huawei reveals chip design breakthrough amid US sanctions
3 hours -
NPL threat looms over Ghana’s banking sector – IMF demands stronger action
3 hours -
Ghana Horticulture Expo 2026 to champion agricultural self-reliance through innovation
3 hours -
Banking reforms incomplete, state-owned banks under watch – IMF Warns
3 hours