Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana today received support from the World Bank to strengthen its institutional capacity in domestic revenue mobilization, public investment management, debt management, and governance of State-owned Enterprises (SOEs).
Reforming the governance of SOEs and improving government's oversight will also help improve public service delivery and contribute to economy-wide competitiveness.
This was made possible with an approval of a $15 million Ghana Economic Management Strengthening (GEMS) Technical Assistance Project by the World Bank s Board of Executive Directors.
The project which complements a series of Development Policy operations is to support reforms in debt management, public investment management, SOE governance, and capacity strengthening in domestic revenue mobilization.
It will specifically support improvements in the Ministry of Finance; the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA); the National Development Planning Commission (NDPC); targeted SOEs; and select Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs).
Our support to Ghana under the GEMS project will among others, help the Ministry of Finance build capacity to better operationalize its medium-term debt management strategy and also help improve public service delivery through reforming the governance of SOEs so Government financing needs are met at the lowest cost with prudent levels of risk, said World Bank Country Director for Ghana, Henry Kerali.
The GEMS Technical Assistance project will contribute to increased domestic revenue mobilization, reduced debt burden, help support better public investments and bring improved economic benefits to the people of Ghana.
The project is consistent with and aligned to the Ghana Shared Growth and Development Agenda II (GSGDA II) 2014 2017, which seeks to support growth and restore macroeconomic stability.
It is also closely aligned to The World Bank s Country Partnership Strategy for Ghana (2013 2016), which is to deepen support for Ghana s transition and involves assisting the country to sustain economic growth, reduce extreme poverty, and enhance shared prosperity for all Ghanaians to share in the benefits of that growth.
Latest Stories
-
I don’t care who wins NPP primaries; may the best candidate emerge – Kofi Amoabeng
2 minutes -
Lower Manya Krobo MP rewards constituents for outstanding contributions to Kroboland development
4 minutes -
Elixir or Placebo? Microeconomics as the litmus test for Ghana’s Macroeconomic Recovery
9 minutes -
I won’t celebrate Ken Ofori-Atta’s troubles – Kofi Amoabeng
17 minutes -
GPRTU announces a crackdown over illegal fare increases
21 minutes -
COPEC urges NPA to scrap fuel price floors to ease costs for consumers
29 minutes -
“Underestimate Dr Adutwum at your own risk” — Adutwum camp fires back at Bryan Achampong video
54 minutes -
The role of curriculum in transmitting societal values: Why NaCCA must be resourced and empowered
1 hour -
Avance Media unveils first-ever top 100 Ghanaians powerlist for 2025
1 hour -
Benin’s opposition loses all parliamentary seats, provisional results show
1 hour -
New market report reveals 55% of Ghanaian jobs now demand a bachelor’s degree
1 hour -
Aide to National Timber Monitoring Team boss arrested amid intensified crackdown on illegal logging
1 hour -
Tension mounts in Akyem Akroso over plans to sell royal cemetery for supermarket project
1 hour -
Fuel price floor protects consumers, safeguards industry sustainability – COMAC CEO
1 hour -
Ghana welcomes digital platform GHKonnect.com to connect businesses
1 hour
