News

IMF deal: Electricity tariff hikes, tax reforms key conditions in securing programme – Ofori-Atta

Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, has outlined five key measures necessary for the government to pursue in order to secure an International Monetary Fund (IMF) support programme.

They are electricity tariff hikes which have brought the cumulative increase to 60% since August 2022 and Comprehensive set of revenue-enhancing measures, including increase in the Value Added Tax rate and the review of the Electronic Transaction Levy (E-levy).

The rest are the enactment of an ambitious 2023 Budget, with a frontloading of the fiscal consolidation programme, continued monetary policy tightening to bring inflation under control and comprehensive set of structural reforms, notably public expenditure review.

These were captured in the Investors Presentation by the Finance Minister and supported by the Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Ernest Addison.

With regard to fiscal and debt sustainability, the Finance Minister said the government has undertaken fiscal adjustment with revenue and expenditure measures to improve debt sustainability and restore macroeconomic stability.

This is expected to address structural bottlenecks including contingent liabilities of State Owned Enterprises, commitment controls and arrears accumulation as well as domestic revenue mobilization.

On monetary and financial sector reforms, Mr. Ofori-Atta said government is committed to rebuilding reserve buffers, mobilize external concessional financing from multilateral and bilateral partners, and suspend external debt service payments.

With regard to social protection and structural reforms, the Finance Minister said government will safeguard social protection programmes and ensure the burden of adjustment is fairly distributed.

Again, it will reinforce and improve the targeting of social spending to protect the most vulnerable from the impact of the economic crisis as well as fast-track the implementation of growth-oriented socio-economic policies, such as Ghana CARES to mitigate the impact of the pandemic and support economic recovery

Government outlines 5 ambitious macroeconomic targets

Meanwhile, the government has outlined five ambitious macroeconomic objectives in the medium term as part of securing a programme from the International Monetary Fund.

They are reaching a 1.5% of Gross Domestic Product primary surplus in the medium term, bringing inflation below 8% in the medium-term and restoring external buffers with gross international reserves reaching 3 months of import cover by 2026.

The rest are reaching a real Gross Domestic Product growth target of 5% over the medium-term and enhancing competitiveness with exports surpassing 37% of GDP in the medium run.

 

Related posts

Interior Minister warns against usage of chieftaincy crests as vehicle registration plates

Isaac_Nana_Appiah

Russia-Ukraine war will not affect our trade relations with Africa – US

Isaac_Nana_Appiah

The Christian caucus presenting a citation to the minority chief whip,

Isaac_Nana_Appiah

1 comment

Koo April 15, 2023 at 11:58 pm

Honourable finance minister forget all this nonsense big English talk. Say what will bring down the hardsjip on Ghanaians. You of bring down inflation to below 8% from where we are now, are you dreaming or sick, who are you fooling, maybe yourself and your team of thieves. Bible asks us not to judge but you shall rot in hell if you would even get there, a stupid sychrohant like you

Reply

Leave a Comment