Audio By Carbonatix
A former Finance Minister, Seth Terkper has advised government to use the mid-year budget to aggressively pursue fiscal reforms that will encourage the private sector to invest in the country.
He warns that confidence among the business community is weaning due to high taxes.
Speaking to Joy Business, Mr. Terkper said government has an opportunity with the IMF deal to restore confidence in the mid-year budget among businesses.
He stated that government cannot continue to waste resources in the public sector.
“In 2020 and 2021, we have had all the significant flows into the economy and yet we couldn’t turn things around”, he argued.
He maintained that the IMF deal provides a perfect opportunity to pursue reforms that will stabilise the economy and ensure rapid recovery.
“I hope that this is an opportunity to do real reforms. The fund has started making adjustments. There are contingency plans for us. They have made an adjustments for us to bring us out of the woodworks”.
Mr. Terkper stated that the rapid adjustment and emergency measures taken by the Fund indicate a positive signal that must be used to get the economy back on track.
He added that there is the need to target the fiscal deficit and the debt stock to create some space for economic development.
He is of the view that the reforms that will be pursued by government will also help the country in subsequent reviews to fast track the release of the remaining funds under the programme.
“The success will depend on real performance. The Fund will be very alert. Don’t forget the IMF money because the money we are receiving is a loan”.
Government to reduce salary to public employees
As part of the reforms, government is targeting to reduce compensation of public sector employees by 0.5 percent of GDP.
According to the government, it is undertaking what it describes as wage moderation to achieve the target.
This was contained in the Ghana 3-year programme with the International Monetary Fund to achieve fiscal discipline and return the country back to economic growth.
The document also says wages of public sector workers will be calibrated to ensure a balance between burden sharing, productivity, and capacity to pay.
Latest Stories
-
Six critically injured in gruesome head-on collision near Akrade
3 hours -
Gov’t to extradite foreign national who secretly filmed Ghanaian women to face prosecution – Sam George
3 hours -
U20 WWC: Black Princesses to play Uganda in final round of qualifiers
3 hours -
Burundi takes the helm as African Union declares ‘war’ on water scarcity
4 hours -
‘I will never forget you’ – Kennedy Agyapong thanks supporters, NPP delegates after primaries
5 hours -
Woman found dead in boyfriend’s room at Somanya
6 hours -
Woman feared dead after being swept away in Nima drain amid heavy rain
7 hours -
Court grants GH¢10k bail to trader who posed as soldier at 37 Military Hospital
7 hours -
Tano North MP secures funding to reconstruct decades-old Yamfo Market
7 hours -
Haruna Iddrisu discharged after road traffic accident
7 hours -
Kenyans drop flowers for Valentine’s bouquets of cash. Not everyone is impressed
7 hours -
Human trafficking and cyber fraud syndicate busted at Pokuase
7 hours -
Photos: First Lady attends African First Ladies for Development meeting in Ethiopia
8 hours -
2026 U20 WWCQ: Black Princesses beat South Africa to make final round
8 hours -
World Para Athletics: UAE Ambassador applauds Ghana for medal-winning feat
9 hours
