Audio By Carbonatix
Thursday night’s Business Edition of PM Express will be having a conversation with the Director General of SSNIT.
The conversation is centered on the scheme recording some negative returns on investment portfolios in the past.
Dr Ofori-Tenkorag will be explaining how to sustain the SSNIT pension scheme and contributions.
Join in the conversation:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Bawumia is a nice person but can’t lead Nkrumah’s Ghana – Frimpong-Boateng
20 minutes -
Amin Adam took over a rotten economy and fixed it; he isn’t your mate – Richard Nyama to Stephen Amoah
38 minutes -
BoG sets strict Ghana Card rule for financial transactions
42 minutes -
Court grants bail to Oyarifa apartment fire suspects
48 minutes -
Kaiser Flats residents protest TDC eviction move
54 minutes -
BoG Governor calls for national reforms to end gold-for-reserves losses
55 minutes -
Ofori-Atta could stay in the US despite ICE arrest – Immigration lawyer explains
1 hour -
CDM warns against shifting Gold-for-Reserves losses to taxpayers
1 hour -
CDM accuses government of opaqueness over Gold-for-Reserves losses
1 hour -
Gold-for-Reserves: CDM demands forensic audit after BoG seeks reimbursement
1 hour -
Ofori-Atta detention goes beyond visa overstay – US lawyer reveals FBI role
2 hours -
Gold-for-Reserves is a governance failure, not an accounting dispute – CDM
2 hours -
‘This is not a typical immigration case’ – US lawyer on Ofori-Atta detention
2 hours -
Ofori-Atta travelled to UK and returned to US before ICE arrest – Victor Smith reveals
3 hours -
ICE sees it as a high-profile case, not routine – Ghana’s US High Commissioner on Ofori-Atta detention
3 hours
