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General News of Saturday, 9 December 2023

Source: classfmonline.com

Ghana spent US$226m on wigs, US$214m on used clothes imports in 2021 - OEC data

Second-hand clothing on sale | File photo Second-hand clothing on sale | File photo

Out of the $2.6 billion spent by Ghana on the importation of 14 products in 2021, $226 million was spent on fake hair (wigs), OEC trade data repository reveals.

The other items include:

Rice - $552m

Poultry - $410m

Palm oil - $289m

Mosquito coil and insecticides - $260m,

Used clothing- $214m,

Sugar - $185m,

Processed fish - $128m,

Tea - $128m,

Guts, bladders and intestines of animals - $65.7m,

Soaps and detergents - $41.2m,

Onions - $33.1 m,

Brooms - $26m,

Margarine - $11.7m.

The government of Ghana recently attempted restricting the importation of some 22 products, including most of the 14 items above but met stiff opposition to the move and later suspended it.

It has also emerged that the International Monetary Fund (IMF), as part of the three-year $3-billion extended credit facility to Ghana, has instructed the government of Ghana against any such import restrictions between 2023 and 2026.

As part of the conditionalities, the IMF said on page 76 of the document that there would be “no imposition or intensification of import restrictions for balance of payments reasons”.

It is one of the four prohibitions imposed by the IMF on the government of Ghana, including “no imposition or intensification of restrictions on making payments and transfers for current international transactions”, “no introduction or modification of multiple currency practices” and “no conclusion of bilateral payments agreements inconsistent with Article VIII of the IMF Articles of Arrangement”.