Business News of Wednesday, 9 July 2025

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

'The IMF is not your friend' - Ghanaians react to call for reduced BoG FX market interventions

The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF)

Some Ghanaians have expressed varied opinions regarding the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) call for the Bank of Ghana (BoG) to reduce its interventions in the foreign exchange market.

The IMF made the call following the appreciation of the cedi and the successful completion of the fourth review of Ghana’s $3 billion programme. The review has unlocked a new disbursement of $367 million, bringing the total support under the programme to $2.3 billion.

This is expected to boost Ghana’s foreign exchange reserves and support the local currency.

Following the Executive Board discussion on Ghana, IMF Deputy Managing Director Bo Li stated, “The authorities have made significant strides toward rebuilding international reserves and have taken steps to bring inflation down.

"The Bank of Ghana should maintain an appropriately tight monetary stance until inflation returns to its target, reduce its footprint in the foreign exchange market, and allow for greater exchange rate flexibility, including by adopting a formal internal FX intervention policy framework.”

The comments have sparked mixed reactions from users on social media platform X (formerly Twitter), with some agreeing with the IMF’s position while others strongly disagreed.

One user said, “The IMF is basically asking our Bank of Ghana to allow the cedi to depreciate so it will hurt our economy and keep Ghana enslaved to the IMF. They hate us. Pay off our debts and use our resources to develop our country. The IMF has never led any nation to prosperity. Until our leaders accept that reality, nothing will change.”

Another wrote, “Which IMF advice has ever lifted a country out of poverty? None. Their policies only widen the gap between the rich and the poor. Every piece of advice from them sounds good on the surface, but in the end, it leads to economic doom. BoG, be guided! Study the economic history of their interventions and learn from it.”

“The IMF was not truly established to make developing nations wealthy or to lift them out of poverty. Its structure and operations seem designed to ensure that less privileged countries, especially those in Africa, remain economically dependent and underdeveloped,” another user said.































SSD/MA

Cheque Fraud EXPOSED: How it works and how to stay safe



GhanaWeb Special: The gold market that fuels galamsey