Audio By Carbonatix
Chief Executive Officer of Dalex Finance, Joe Jackson, has recommended that government consider paying contractors with tradeable bonds rather than cash, as a strategy to avoid exacerbating inflation.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show on Wednesday, 30th July, Mr Jackson cautioned that injecting large sums of cash into the economy without proper planning could have serious inflationary consequences.
“Any time payments are made, what you’re paying for will influence the impact it has,” he explained. “If you're paying a contractor who is going to use that money to continue work, it has a very different effect from paying one whose project is already completed.”
He noted that payments for ongoing projects generate continued economic activity, while payments for completed works risk flooding the economy with money that creates little value.
“At the beginning of the year, arrears were up to GH¢64 billion. If you pump that directly into the economy, you're going to get a huge inflationary effect,” he warned.
To mitigate this, Mr Jackson proposed that the government issue long-term, tradeable bonds to contractors whose projects have been completed and are no longer active.
“Let’s negotiate some sort of long-term payment. Give them bonds—bonds they can trade on the secondary market—so the money doesn’t go straight into the system and cause disruption,” he suggested.
While acknowledging that this approach may be unpopular among contractors, Mr Jackson stressed the importance of finding a pragmatic path forward given the country’s recent economic difficulties.
“The contractors are not going to be happy. But let’s be real, just seven months ago, we were in the throes of an economic crisis,” he said.
He further argued that contractors must be prepared to accept difficult but necessary decisions, pointing out that various stakeholders have already borne the brunt of economic reforms.
“Foreigners who gave us money have taken a haircut, domestic people have taken a haircut, and citizens have taken a haircut. Maybe the contractors should also accept a creative way that won’t please them but will help us move forward.”
Latest Stories
-
Viral fame vs traditional education in the republic of uncommon sense
3 minutes -
SHS assault: Education Ministry must do more than request investigations – Dr Peter Anti
9 minutes -
What’s going on — How we can create instead of waiting for jobs
14 minutes -
Shisha, cigarette smoking fuels breast cancer in Ghana – Dr Beatrice Wiafe sounds alarm
16 minutes -
Stephen Donkor: Ghana’s conscience in question
27 minutes -
At least 25 soldiers dead in attacks after raid on Mexico’s most wanted cartel leader
32 minutes -
Church of Stories returns with new audio drama series, ‘The Gold Coast Darlings’
35 minutes -
We will leave no stone unturned – IGP vows crackdown after arrest of robbery gang
40 minutes -
TRRS celebrates unprecedented success in Queen’s Commonwealth Essay Competition
42 minutes -
Ghana and Japan seal US$20m health grant for Northern Region hospitals
48 minutes -
Afram Publications promotes multilingual literacy at Theorose School
49 minutes -
Politics with a purpose: Ghana’s call to serve
50 minutes -
SHS assault: School authorities should enforce existing code of conduct – Yaw Opoku Mensah
56 minutes -
Three arrested over Obrachire student assault
1 hour -
Only operational landfill in Eastern Greater Accra set to overflow within a month
1 hour
