Introduction
1. Good Afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen of the Media as well as everyone joining us on the various social media platforms. I thank you sincerely for honouring our invitation to this Press Conference. Let me say HAPPY FATHER’S Day to all men and fathers for the guidance, hard work, and selflessness. May the unfailing grace of God empower us to fulfil our roles to our families and nation.
2. I just returned from the preliminary sessions of the AFREXIM Bank Annual General Meeting taking place in Accra; just a year after we hosted the African Development Bank’s Annual General Meeting. Truly, Ghana continues to enjoy global attention as an example of economic renaissance.
3. There have been significant developments since I went to Parliament in November, 2022, engaged you in December, 2022 and the approval of IMF facility. Subsequent to these, and the conclusion of the IMF Staff Mission last week, I will, today, share with you an update on the economy. More importantly, I will also discuss the details of the programme of work to return our economy to the path of strong sustainability and growth and provide more opportunities for our people.
Responding to a Challenging Year
4. Ladies and Gentlemen, Wednesday, 17th May 2023 is a day to be memorialized. On that day, Ghana secured approval for a US$3 billion 3-year Extended Credit Facility from the Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to support the implementation of Ghana’s Post-COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG).
5. As was the case in many other Emerging Market Economies devastated by rising debt, worsening financing conditions, high inflation, deteriorating exchange rate and Balance of Payment (BOP) pressures, Ghana sought IMF assistance to support our PC-PEG. The implementation of the PC-PEG aims to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability, and to support inclusive growth while protecting the vulnerable.
It is also aimed at building resilience and promote efficiency and competitiveness through wide-ranging and strong structural reforms in key sectors of the economy. We also sought to leverage the catalytic effect an IMF programme would offer in terms of accessing additional financing and building confidence.
6. Our decision to seek support was in the context that our envisioned path to rapid economic recovery, with a remarkable economic growth rate of 5.1% in 2021 against 0.5% in 2020, had suddenly been halted; requiring us to seek support to enable our people to safely cross the Jordan to the ‘Promised Land’.
7. Ladies and Gentlemen, between the announcement, engagements, agreement, approval and disbursement of the first tranche of US$604 million on Friday, 19th May 2023 under the ECF was a 10-month period (1st July, 2022- 19th May, 2023), a record timeline by all standards.
8. Many were surprised when I announced that we were on the cusp of a break-through agreement while presenting the 2023 Budget Statement on Thursday, 17th November 2022. I believed then that we were making remarkable progress towards securing an SLA. The pace of our progress had been underpinned by the unity of purpose by the Executive and the Ministry, shared focus, diligence, strong collaboration and, of course, the abiding and abundant grace of God.
9. This progress is anchored on the pursuit of planned but sacrificial interventions, including the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP), to enable us effectively manage the rising cost of debt and create fiscal space for growth-enhancing reforms.
10. As a nation, we need to be proud of what May 17th signals, and what we have been able to achieve against all odds and in a turbulent global environment. Our $3 billion support is 3 times our quota, and the largest allocation from the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT), we front-loaded within 6 months $1.2 billion of the $3 billion facility, of which $604 billion was disbursed within 3 days of approval.
11. Let us also not forget the uncertainties of the G20 Common Framework for Debt Treatment and the role of the Paris Club and China’s agreement to Co-Chair the Official Creditor Committee (OCC), and with support from India, Saudi Arabia and Turkey to deliver financing assurances to the IMF Board on May 12th. For us in Ghana, we successfully navigated a difficult Domestic Debt Exchange Programme with steadfastness.
My gratitude to the individuals and banking, insurance and capital markets sector for their resolve, and the strong intercessory prayers by our Faith Based Organisations.
12. So “Fellow Ghanaians” as in Psalm 118: “Let us give thanks to the Lord for He is good.
For this is the Lord’s doing and it is indeed marvelous in our eyes’ 13.Also on behalf of H.E. President Akufo-Addo and the entire Government, I would like to express profound appreciation, once again, to:
i. our fellow Ghanaians, especially those who voluntarily and overwhelmingly participated in the DDEP, allowing us to achieve an 85% success rate by 14th February 2023, and sacrificing for economic recovery and reform of the Republic; ii. the Right Hon. Speaker and Hon. Members of Parliament for their support, especially in approving key revenue measures on 31st March, 2023 to enable us fulfil a key prior action relating to our programme with the IMF;
iii. our development partners, especially our bilateral partners for their financing assurances, delivered on Friday, 12th May, 2023, which was pivotal in securing IMF Board approval;
iv. you our friends in the media, who have kept our people well-informed of the process and sustained their hopes, despite the misinformation from certain quarters of our fraternity.
We are a resilient people, a people of destiny and we shall prevail in all things, because the Lord is on our side and the Battle is the Lords.
14. I would also like to express profound gratitude to the IMF Managing Director, Kristalina Georgieva, for her unwavering support and belief in our ambitious reform agenda, to Abebe Selassie and especially the IMF Mission Chief, Stephane Roudet and the Team for their tireless efforts and constructive dialogue with Government. My sincere thanks also go to the technical team at the Ministry of Finance and Bank of Ghana who worked so hard throughout the period.
Immediate Impact and Respite
15. Thanks to your support, partnership and forbearance in these key processes, coupled with the implementation of the front-loaded fiscal adjustments outlined in the 2023 Budget, as well as other government interventions, we are already seeing positive outcomes.
16. The United States, through the International Development Finance Corporation within 3 days of the Fund Approval announced a programme to invest US$300 million to establish the Ghana Data Centre under the G7 Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII). This is very significant as it illustrates the confidence that is being restored and the focus on a private sector growth agenda that we will be pursuing to transition our economy.
17. On the domestic front, as we speak today:
i. Inflation has decelerated to 42.2% for the month of May 2023, down from 54.1% at the end of December 2022. The May inflation represents a 1ppt increase in the April 2023 inflation of 41.2%. The May Inflation was largely driven by Food Inflation of 51.8% (up from 48.7% in April) with Non-Food Inflation decelerating to 34.6% from 35.4% in April.
The relative rise in inflation in May 2023 appears to reflect the pass through effect of the utility price adjustments in April and the implementation of the new tax handles in May. We expect inflation to decelerate going forward;
ii. the Cedi’s depreciation has largely stabilized with a year-to-date depreciation rate of about 21.9% (as at Friday 16th June 2023), down from 50% in December 2023;
iii. the 91-Day T-Bill rate has declined to 20.6%, down from 35.5% at the end of 2022; iv. Gross International Reserves has improved to US$5.7 billion (at the end of May 2023) after the disbursement of first tranche of US$604 million following the approval of the IMF Programme; v. The current account balance turned positive at 0.9% of GDP at the end March 2023 from -2.2% at end of December 2022. In addition, the trade balance improved from 0.9% of GDP at the end of January 2023 to 2.2% at the end of April 2023; and vi. Recent GDP statistics released by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) in April 2022 showed that growth ended 2022 at 3.1% which was higher than growth projections by most international organizations.
An Ambitious Agenda for Reform
18. Ladies and Gentlemen, let me state clearly that securing the IMF programme is not an end to our current challenges. Though it has significantly paved the way for the implementation of an ambitious and well thought out programme of reform for our economy and country.
In fact, the real work of adjustments, re-alignments and the return to a path of steady economic growth has just begun. Let us brace ourselves for the needed reforms, especially in expenditure control, non-arrears accumulation, revenue growth, ECG collections and Energy Sector reforms, in order to rebuild the walls of the Republic with urgency.
19. That said, our reform programme, the Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG), now supported by the 3-year Extended Credit Facility arrangement with the IMF, is built on clear targets and strong policy and structural measures.
20. Over the medium term, the PC-PEG backed IMF programme seeks to:
i. promote a credible fiscal consolidation programme, anchored by strong domestic revenue mobilisation and high spending efficiency. The Government is targeting a primary surplus on a commitment basis—the critical fiscal anchor under the program— of 1.5% of GDP by 2025 through to 2028;
ii. firmly anchor inflation expectations and preserve financial stability; iii. restore public debt to sustainable levels by 2028 by observing the two binding constraints of:
a. Public Debt (in present value terms) to GDP ratio of 55% or less; and
b. An External Debt Service to Revenue ratio of 18% or less.
iv. enhance economic competitiveness, with exports surpassing 37% of GDP in the medium-term;
v. Safeguarding Social Protection and enhancing targeting to ensure effectiveness of key interventions.
vi. Minimising Fiscal Risks, including from SOEs and deepening Structural Reforms in targeted sectors such as Energy and Cocoa.
21. It is important to stress that this structural reform agenda is consistent with Government’s own Public Financial Management Strategy, to transition from Central Government to General Government operations. This shift is critical as it facilitates clear oversight over key state institutions (MMDAs, SOEs- especially Cocobod and ECG, and others in the energy sector- and other quasi-State Institutions) whose operations have significant and direct fiscal impact on our economy.
22. To put it in perspective, about 25% of our assessed debt burden emanates from non-central Government operations, mainly from State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) such as COCOBOD and those in the Energy Sector. Our ability to institute better governance standards of these institutions to address their liabilities and promote their growth will be significantly improved, especially in this period of collective reform.
23. Crucially, we must all remain committed to the agreed wide-ranging and strong structural reforms designed to address structural weaknesses and build resilience in key areas including tax policy and tax administration, expenditure commitment control and arrears clearance, financial stability, financial sector plans, review of statutory funds, governance and corruption, debt management, fiscal credibility, and energy sector/cocoa sector SOEs reformation.
24. With legacy debt in the Energy Sector reaching about US$2 billion as at the end of May 2023, and an estimated shortfall of US$5.9 billion between 2023 and 2025, due to the current conditions of SOEs and IPPs in the value chain in the sector, the sector has been prioritised for comprehensive reforms. It is expected that structural reforms in the sector should reduce the shortfall by at least US$2.95 billion over the period.
25. These reforms, which are aimed at sustainably reducing losses in the energy sector, will be outlined in the updated Energy Sector Recovery Plan (ESRP), which will be approved by Cabinet by end June 2023. It will be accompanied by, amongst others, the: i. Operationalization of a framework to guide the granting of energy sector subsidies by end June 2023; ii. Implementation of an inter-utility debt settlement framework on a quarterly basis starting from June 2023; and iii. Implementation of a mechanism to enforce the guidelines of the Cash Waterfall Mechanism (CWM) and Natural Gas Clearinghouse (NGC) by end-June 2023.
26. Ladies and Gentlemen, similar reforms are envisaged under the PC-PEG to revamp the Cocoa Sector and reduce/eliminate the annual losses of Cocobod and its indebtedness. The reforms in the Cocoa sector include the implementation of a turn-around strategy, to be approved by Cabinet by end-June 2023. This is expected to address cocoa pricing issues, Cocobod oversight challenges, introduce cost rationalisation measures and a phase-out of quasi-fiscal spending.
27. Ladies and Gentlemen, other structural reforms to entrench fiscal discipline and bolster transparency include reforms to enhance revenue administration and tax policy, operationalization of the Human Resource Management Information System, enhancing spending controls and prevention of arrears build-up, and streamlining of earmarked funds. In addition, Government is transitioning from Central Government reporting to General Government, and from cash to accrual reporting.