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Ghana set to request for a $1.5 billion loan from the IMF

Ghana is likely to ask the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for as much as $1.5 billion in a quest to strengthen its finances and regain access to international capital markets.

This was disclosed by the country’s Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, in a phone interview with Bloomberg, hours before talks begin with the IMF in Accra.

Until now, Ghana, the continent’s second-biggest gold producer, had refused to seek IMF support to rescue an economy crippled by the pandemic, rampant inflation, and a depreciating currency, despite analysts warning it is close to a debt crisis.

Mr Ofori-Atta stated that it was a hard decision, but the right one “because the global outlook was really grim and its negative effects on the Ghanaian economy was glaring.”

After Moody’s Investors Service cut Ghana’s rating, the nation lost access to overseas capital markets and “hence our inability to get the needed dollars, which created balance of payment problems and a possible rundown of our reserves.”

Mr Ofori-Atta said on Tuesday in an emailed statement that the government’s plan, which would last at least three years, aims to restore debt sustainability and macroeconomic stability, improve the monetary policy of the central bank, and provide buffers against economic shocks.

“This programme allows for a catalytic engagement, including regaining access to the capital market,” Mr Ofori-Atta said in the interview, adding that Egypt’s talks with IMF earlier this year encouraged the North African nation to sell Samurai bonds.

Furthermore, the conflict between Russia and Ukraine is expected to have a substantial impact on Ghana’s exchange rate, particularly in the construction, agriculture, and international trade sectors.

Russia and Ukraine accounted for around 2.5 per cent of Ghana’s total, non-oil imports and 0.4 per cent of Ghana’s total exports in the recent past.

Ghana has been working to reduce its debt, which at the end of March 2022 was 78 per cent of its GDP, up from 62.5 per cent five years earlier.

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