Audio By Carbonatix
The World Bank today approved a $300 million Development Policy Operation for Ghana.
The First Resilient Recovery Development Policy Financing is a critical contribution by the Bank’s International Development Association (IDA) to help Ghana’s economic recovery and support the country’s resilient and inclusive growth.
“The Government of Ghana remains committed to restoring macroeconomic stability and to the implementation of lasting reforms to set the economy on a path of strong long-term sustainable growth and transformation.
"The disbursement of this $300 million Development Policy Financing, the first in a series of three, will play a vital role in easing Ghana’s fiscal constraints, sustaining the momentum of economic recovery while protecting the poor and vulnerable," the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta said.
The approval of this financing package follows last week’s agreement in principle by the Official Creditors’ Committee under the G20 Common Framework on the key parameters of the proposed debt restructuring for Ghana.
The agreement, which is consistent with the Joint World Bank-International Monetary Fund Debt Sustainability Framework, represents a critical milestone toward restoring debt sustainability.
“Restoring fiscal and debt sustainability, bolstering growth prospects, curbing inflation, and protecting the most vulnerable – measures supported by this financing – are urgent priorities for Ghana. They are also essential steps to allow the country to attract more foreign investment, revitalize its domestic private sector, build resilience against climate change, and improve the quality of life of its people,” the World Bank Vice President for Western and Central Africa, Ousmane Diagana stated.
The Resilient Recovery Development Policy Operation is the first in a series of three operations of $300 million each and part of a broad World Bank engagement for crisis response and resilience in Ghana.
Its objectives are to: 1) restore fiscal sustainability; 2) support financial sector stability and private sector development; 3) improve energy sector financial discipline; and 4) strengthen social and climate resilience.
Specific reforms supported by this financing series include strengthening domestic revenue mobilization, controlling expenditures, safeguarding financial sector stability, removing barriers to private investment, setting the energy sector on a sounder financial and operational footing, strengthening the country’s social protection system, and mainstreaming climate adaptation and mitigation across policies.
The World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), established in 1960, helps the world’s poorest countries by providing grants and low to zero-interest loans for projects and programs that boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve poor people’s lives.
IDA is one of the largest sources of assistance for the world’s 74 poorest countries, 39 of which are in Africa. Resources from IDA bring positive change to the 1.3 billion people who live in IDA countries.
Since 1960, IDA has provided $458 billion to 114 countries. Annual commitments have averaged about $29 billion over the last three years (FY19-FY21), with about 70 percent going to Africa.
Learn more online: IDA.worldbank.org. #IDAworks
Latest Stories
-
Gold cannot be managed like cocoa — GoldBod CEO explains trading model
33 minutes -
Paga Youth Movement demand answers over suspicious aircraft landings at local airstrip
42 minutes -
Sammy Gyamfi, Dr Tiah Mahama clash over Bawa Rock incorporation details
44 minutes -
Claims that Bawa Rock isn’t a licensed gold trader untrue – Sammy Gyamfi
1 hour -
The truth about AI music nobody is explaining
1 hour -
IMF has right to call it trading losses – Bright Simons responds to GoldBod claims
2 hours -
Gold-for-Reserves: Self-finance aggregators struggling to compete with Bawa Rock – Bright Simons
2 hours -
Gold-for-Reserves is a BoG programme, not GoldBod – Sammy Gyamfi clarifies
2 hours -
Trump says US has ‘captured’ Venezuelan President Maduro amid large scale strikes
3 hours -
GoldBod hasn’t made any losses; we made over GH₵960m in 2025 – Sammy Gyamfi
3 hours -
No losses at GoldBod, audit will prove it – Sammy Gyamfi assures Ghanaians
3 hours -
JOY FM thanks patrons for making 90s Jam 2026 a success
3 hours -
I’ll fight for the separation of Chiana from Paga constituency – Mahama Ayariga
3 hours -
Livestream: Newsfile discusses over US$214m loss in Gold-for-Reserves and galamsey fight
4 hours -
University of Ghana points to student leaders over 25% fee hike
7 hours
