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Business News of Saturday, 27 March 2021

Source: 3news.com

Ghana’s debt already exceeding 85% of GDP – Lord Mensah

Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta

A critical analysis of the budget statement for the 2021 fiscal year shows that Ghana’s debt situation has gone beyond the 76 percent to record 85 of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Dr Lord Mensah, a senior lecturer at the University of Ghana Business School, has said.

The 2021 budget statement presented to parliament by the leader of government business Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu said the total debt rose from 122billion in 2019 to 291.6billion as of the end of December 2020.

This deficit, according to the budget, includes the cost of the financial sector cleanup up.

Speaking on the Key Points on TV3 Saturday, March 27 in relation to the vetting of Finance Minister-designate Ken Ofori Atta, Dr Lord Mensah said “If you go through the interest payment that we are sup[posed to have, the financing gap they have created out of the budget is about 41billion and over which we are going to finance and then in the same budget it was stated that our debt stock was around 240 plus billion.

“If you put all these together and then you relate it to our GDP which is about 440plus billion, you will realize that we are heading towards about 85 percent for more than the 76 per cent that has been put out."

“If you look at the budget we are hitting around 85 per cent and. If you look at the recent statement that came from the World Bank they are projecting our debt by 2023 to be about 81 per cent of our GDP. I was not surprised.”

Regarding the new taxes that have been introduced in the budget, he told host of the show Abena Tabi that “If you underreport and in the end, you turn around and tell them to pay something it will be difficult to explain that to them. So, reporting and fully reporting discourse is very important. When it comes to public service there is nothing like mandatory disclosure and then disclosure that you can hold on. For me, the more information you give out to the public the better it is for them to understand you when you are going out with your fiscal policies by introducing taxes. I think we should better in reporting

“But I understand where the Finance Minister is coming from because these are information that when it gets out there people will be saying even our debt level is now 80 to 85 percent but implicitly if you take the budget critically and you analyze you will realize that the debt that we have in there is even more than as expected by end of the year is even more than 85 percent of our GDP."