Audio By Carbonatix
The Civil and Local Government Staff Association of Ghana (CLOGSAG) has alleged that some corporate trustees took advantage of the Debt Exchange Programme because they had prior knowledge.
Executive Secretary of CLOGSAG, Isaac Bampoe Addo at a press conference on Friday revealed that these trustees, per their prior knowledge of the programme, converted their domestic bond holdings into foreign assets.
According to him, they also transformed their bond holdings into cash to escape the government’s haircut.
“The manner the DDE was handled has raised pertinent issues. Some Corporate Trustees had prior knowledge of the domestic debt exchange programme and were able to convert their domestic bond holdings into either foreign assets or foreign currency or change the corporate holdings into individual holdings. They also changed their bond holdings into cash,” Isaac Bampoe Addo said.
CLOGSAG, therefore, called on the National Pension Regulatory Authority (NPRA) to investigate the allegations.
“These concerns should not be left unattended to. We call on the National Pension Regulatory Authority to investigate this matter with regard to its investment and NPRA guidelines.”
Government on Thursday announced an exemption of all pension funds from the debt exchange programme after a memorandum of understanding with Organised Labour.
This follows staunch agitations and opposition from Organised Labour for fears of haircuts on the pension funds of their members.
But CLOGSAG says despite the exemption of the pension funds from the programme, its members will embark on a nationwide strike “should government fail to honour any of our coupons when they fall due.”
“Surprisingly the government chose domestic debt exchange as an answer to its inability to service the domestic debt when it could have curtailed its flagship programmes that would have gone a long way to exhibit willingness on the part of government,” he added.
Government after its meeting with Organised Labour on Thursday has since formed a seven-member committee to explore technical solutions to bring the debt threshold back to sustainable limits.
The Committee comprised four representatives from Government and three representatives from Organised Labour. They are expected to submit a report on December 28.
Latest Stories
-
Prof Peprah says Gold Board’s biggest threat isn’t gold, it’s financing
21 minutes -
US agency sues Coca-Cola bottler over employee event that excluded men
49 minutes -
German court orders X to grant data access for Hungary election research
60 minutes -
Use today’s gold windfall to insure Ghana’s future – Prof Peprah urges gov’t
1 hour -
Create a Gold Stabilisation Fund now, or pay later – Finance Prof tells gov’t
2 hours -
Gold Board is good, but Ghana must prepare for the fall – Prof Peprah
2 hours -
Don’t let Gold Board become the next COCOBOD – Finance professor warns
2 hours -
Ivory Coast considers following Ghana with cocoa price cut, sources say
3 hours -
Microsoft says it does not think US ICE uses firm’s tech for mass surveillance of civilians
3 hours -
You’re never too old, says dancer, 71, cast in Taylor Swift video
3 hours -
Biggest African economies lead stablecoin demand growth, study shows
3 hours -
IMF completes Niger program reviews, approves about $91m in funding
3 hours -
Fake vice presidential staffer remanded over visa fraud
5 hours -
Mobile money vendor in court for stealing
5 hours -
Eleven remanded over land guard case activities
5 hours
