Audio By Carbonatix
The current economic situation will sooner than later compel the government to return to the International Monetary Fund for bailout fund or programme, Economist and Associate Professor at Niagara University in Canada, Dr. Dennis Nsafoah has revealed.
Speaking at the Ghana’s Economic Outlook for 2022 event organized by PFM Tax Africa, Dr. Nsafoah said government’s fiscal targets for this year is unrealistic and therefore it will have no option than to return to the IMF latest by the end of the year.
“Will the government of Ghana seek an IMF intervention? It will. It [government] may delay it, but eventually it [government] will go for it. Thinking about this situation and the most likely outcome may be at the end of the year, when it realize it can't achieve the revenue target”.
Some economists and analysts have since last year predicted a return to the IMF by the government, based on the present situation of the economy.
“The target the government has set for itself is too high, and that is when they will start talking to the IMF. But over the weekend, I had the opportunity of interacting with Seth Terkper [former Finance Minister] and then he made a point that he thinks that it would even be shorter”, Dr. Nsafoah explained.
Furthermore, he alluded that “the most prudent thing for government to do is to actually start talking to the IMF because the target they have set for themselves, it's quite unrealistic. And then it can't achieve that 42% increase in revenue. You can't talk about Budget 2022 without discussing the E-Levy.”
“The best outcome that we’ll see is that by the end of 2022, our debt-to-Gross Domestic Product ratio would actually increase from 83.9%, which is not good. But the most likely outcome by 2025, as inflation in the USA goes down and then the Federal Reserves decrease the pace at which it contract money, things would improve”. And then we would have a debt to GDP ratio of about 73.6%”, he stressed.
But before then, he said, the Federal Reserves will hike interest rates and that will have negative implications on interest rates and exchange.
“An increase in the USA interest rate would definitely have a negative impact on the Ghanaian economy, and that would also have a negative impact on our exchange rate. So this I'd say would be the most likely case. We’ll be hit with exchange rate and interest rates.”
Dr. Nsafoah also said the era for cheap money is no more because the COVID-19 pandemic has had devastating effects on countries and the global economy.
Latest Stories
-
MTN FA Cup: Defending champions Kotoko knocked out by Aduana
1 hour -
S Korean crypto firm accidentally pays out $40bn in bitcoin
1 hour -
Washington Post chief executive steps down after mass lay-offs
2 hours -
Iranian Nobel laureate handed further prison sentence, lawyer says
2 hours -
U20 WWCQ: South Africa come from behind to draw against Black Princesses in Accra
2 hours -
Why Prince William’s Saudi Arabia visit is a diplomatic maze
2 hours -
France murder trial complicated by twin brothers with same DNA
2 hours -
PM’s chief aide McSweeney quits over Mandelson row
2 hours -
Ayawaso East primary: OSP has no mandate to probe alleged vote buying – Haruna Mohammed
3 hours -
Recall of Baba Jamal as Nigeria High Commissioner ‘unnecessary populism’ – Haruna Mohammed
3 hours -
Presidency, NDC bigwigs unhappy over Baba Jamal’s victory in Ayawaso East – Haruna Mohammed
3 hours -
Africa Editors Congress 2026 set for Nairobi with focus on media sustainability and trust
4 hours -
We are tired of waiting- Cocoa farmers protest payment delays
4 hours -
Share of microfinance sector to overall banking sector declined to 8.0% – BoG
5 hours -
Ukraine, global conflict, and emerging security uuestions in the Sahel
5 hours
