Kurt Okraku, the president of the Ghana Football Association (GFA), has responded to former Black Stars defender Joe Addo’s demand that interim manager Otto Addo be fired.
Joe Addo claimed that because the FIFA World Cup is significant to Ghana’s history, the GFA ought to treat it as such by selecting a capable coach to lead the squad.
Kurt Okraku responded to the former Hearts of Oak player’s remark by characterizing Joe Addo’s remark as unfavorable and stating that the Black Stars will excel in Qatar.
“Few days ago, I listened to Joe Addo. And please pass on the message to him. He is a member of the FA. He serves on one of our committees. His negative comment is not for the good of the sports. I’m saying that his negative comment is not good for the sport. Our Black Stars will shine at the World Cup,” he said while addressing ex-Black Stars players at the GFA’s dinner with the Legends held on October 29, 2022.
Kurt then tagged Ghanaians who argue that an interim manager should not lead the Black Stars to the World Cup as ‘too known’.
“Who was the coach that qualified Ghana for the World Cup recently? Who was the coach? Tell me. Is it not Otto? Was he a part-time coach or a full-time coach? Sorry, let’s be positive. What is full-time and part-time and whatnot? Too known.”
Joe Addo, in his interview with GH One, said leaving Black Stars’ at the helm of an interim manager for the world’s biggest international showpiece is totally wrong.
“The Ghana national team is going to play the most important tournament in our history, that is the World Cup. We’ve done it three times, so it’s not automatic that you will get there. We missed the last time in Russia and we are going there with a part-time coach? Are you kidding me? In this day and age? Hell no! We have to have a substantive coach to go to the world cup. That’s my opinion, I could be wrong. But I can’t go to a very very important tournament with an interim coach or a part-time (coach).”
“Why? We don’t have the resources to hire a permanent coach Or does the coach not want to be permanent? What is the scenario? I don’t know that. (But) no, you have to go all in. So either we have a permanent coach who is taking us to the World Cup or we don’t have a coach.”
Ghana head into the World Cup with an interim technical bench of Otto Addo, George Boateng, Mas-Ud Didi Dramani, and a technical advisor.
Mr Akufo-Addo said in his address to the nation on Sunday October 30 that “The following actions have been taken thus far: 1) enhanced supervisory action by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market to flush out illegal operators, as well as ensuring that those permitted to operate legally abide by the market rules.”
“Already some forex bureaus have had their licenses revoked, and this exercise will continue until complete order is restored in the sector,” he said.
The other measures are “Fresh inflows of dollars are providing liquidity to the foreign exchange market, and addressing the pipeline demand;
“The Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in;
“Government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana
“The Bank of Ghana will enhance its gold purchase programme.”
In accordance with the provisions of Sections 11 (1) and 12 (f) of the Foreign Exchange Act 2006 (723), the Bank of Ghana has revoked the licence of Trade House and Airport City Forex Bureaux Limited effective October 27, 2022.
This was based on the Non-compliance with rules governing the operations of foreign exchange bureaux including directive on customer identification and issuance of electronic receipt (Bank of Ghana Notice Number: BG/GOV/SEC/2018/16), (i)The Bank of Ghana reserves the right to revoke the licence of any forex bureau if: in the Bank’s opinion, the conduct of any forex bureau is detrimental to the success of the Forex Bureau Scheme;
According to the Head of Other Financial Institutions Supervision Department at the Bank of Ghana, Yaw Sapong, the exercise targeted at ensuring sanity in the forex market is expected to continue across the capital city, Accra in the Greater Accra region.
The two forex bureaus are under the same ownership and were detected by a mystery shopping exercise by the central bank.
The Head of Other Financial Institutions Supervision department of the Central Bank noted that they were not issuing electronic receipts and not requesting valid proof of identity.
Mr. Sarpong said the “two bureaus on several occasions have been found not to be complying.”
“The way they set their prices are detrimental and we think that the licenses of the two bureaus have to be revoked,” he added.
Arsenal fans took to social media to praise Thomas Partey and proclaim him as the best defensive midfielder in the English Premier League after the Ghanaian’s super performance against Nottingham Forest.
The Black Stars midfielder was at his beastly best as struggling Nottingham Forest who beat Liverpool couldn’t stand the fire bathe at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday, October 30, 2022.
Thomas Partey lasted the entire duration of the game and scored as Arsenal cruised to a comfortable 5-0 victory over their opponent on matchday 13 of the ongoing 2022/2023 Ghana Premier League.
The performance pleased Arsenal fans who took to Twitter to hail Thomas Partey who is now on top of his game after making the switch from Atletico Madrid in the summer of 2020.
Former Arsenal defender, Bacary Sagna, and Nigerian musician, Patoranking led the celebrations as Thomas Partey dominated the trend after Arsenal’s win over Nottingham Forest.
Below are some of the reactions of Arsenal fans praising Thomas Partey for his performance against Nottingham Forest.
Omg !!!!! Partey’s goal…????????✨✨ some deja vu .. @ReissNelson9 impacting the game perfectly
— Bacary Sagna (@Sagnaofficial) October 30, 2022
Partey ❤️ pic.twitter.com/WO7HSKdcf0
— PATORANKING (@patorankingfire) October 30, 2022
Thomas Partey is making this kind of goal a trademark, same against Spurs
— Lατιf???? (@iLatif_) October 30, 2022
We just need Thomas Partey to be fit this season. We’ve not had such a good Defensive Midfielder since Viera.
Arsenal should protect him at all cost. pic.twitter.com/SSxs8zlAbT
— Timoh_P ???????????????? (@timothyminyori) October 31, 2022
Thomas Partey is the best dm in the Premier League and there’s no doubt about it. Put some respect on his name pic.twitter.com/RB21xlbGcM
— Arteta’s Arsenal (@joe_samm1) October 30, 2022
Great weekend for Ghanaian players abroad; Partey scored a stunner, Joseph Paintsil keeps scoring, Baba Iddrisu with an MVP performance, Inaki scored the winner against Villarreal and the list goes on…..
— Bright Kankam Boadu (@TheOnlyBKB) October 30, 2022
Big fan on Mohamed El-Neny tagging Thomas Partey on his Facebook post of his goal against Barcelona ???? pic.twitter.com/wgVfyxw4ds
— Arsenal FC Lovers (@afclovers_) October 30, 2022
Thomas Partey is DAMN PIVOTAL. What a Baller ???????? https://t.co/WAQFT58Coz
— MAŊTSƐ † (@kw3_kaalu) October 31, 2022
— Bortey ???????? (@joelbortey) October 30, 2022
ARSENAL 5 – 0 NOTTINGHAM FOREST
Little better or sweeter for Ghanaians than seeing Thomas Partey performing and scoring like he did today! World Cup is next month and we pray all Black Stars remain injury free and hit form when it matters! pic.twitter.com/uSjFvgq1DD
— herbert mensah (@t1t2men) October 30, 2022
Partey’s goal from this angle is ridiculous
pic.twitter.com/HpCq0yIuDy
“… The current inflation rate is 7.6 percent, and we anticipate that it will at least continue to trend lower and stay below the medium-term target of 8 percent.
We also address other factors, and we hope that the outside climate will remain favorable “Dr. Addison made this statement during a panel discussion on Wednesday, October 30, 2019 at the 8th Ghana Economic Forum in Accra.
The Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG), Dr. Ernest Addison, has projected a downward inflationary trend in the next economic year, barring any external pressures.
Inflation over the past few months has witnessed a marginal decrease to its current state of 7. 6 percent.
“… We’re currently at 7.6 percent; we expect that inflation will continue to trend downwards, at least, below the medium-term target of 8 percent… We also talk of the external factors and we’re hoping that the external environment will continue to be conducive,” Dr. Addison stated at a panel discussion at the 8th edition of the Ghana Economic Forum in Accra on Wednesday, October 30 2019.
He claims that the decision aims to promote domestic export manufacturing while minimizing the effect of foreign exchange on imports.
President Akufo-Addo stated in a speech to the nation on the economy on October 30 that the administration will also examine how Ghana’s foreign exchange reserves are managed with regard to product imports.
He explained the decision comes on the back of the high rate of importation which has been a contributing factor to the cedi’s decline and Ghana’s current economic woes.
“We must a matter of urgent national security, reduce our dependence on imported goods and enhance our self-reliance, as demanded by our overarching goal of creating a Ghana Beyond Aid.”
“Products such as rice, poultry, vegetable oil, toothpicks, pasta, fruit juice, bottled water and ceramic tiles, and others which, with intensified government support and that of the banking sector, can be manufactured and produced in sufficient quantities in Ghana.” he added.
“Government will, in May 2023, that is six months from now, review the situation,” he disclosed.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo has hinted that Ghana could be securing an agreement with the International Monetary Fund by the end of December this year.
According to him, speculations about the cedi and illegal forex trading activity in the past months, have triggered its decline, especially against the US dollar.
“Fellow Ghanaians, as the French would say, l’argent n’aime pas le bruit, to wit, money does not like noise, sika mpɛ dede. Where there is chaos, where there is noise, where there is unrest, you will not find money.”
“If you talk down your money, it will go down. If you allow some unidentifiable person to talk down your money, it will go down,” he noted.
Although this theory can be debated, Ghanaians on social media platform, Twitter, in their own way, have been seeking to ‘resurrect’ the cedi which is listed as the worst-performing currency in the world, overtaking the Sri Lankan Rupee.
In a rather satirical turn of events, some Ghanaians on the platform have been calling for the cedi to miraculously appreciate and perform better than it currently is.
“Arise oh cedi! Again I say arise!,” one user wrote.
This has been coupled with inflationary pressures which have seen Ghana record a rate of 37.2 percent in September 2022 – the highest in about 20 decades.
The current economic challenges in Ghana have culminated in job losses, worker agitations, rising cost of living and general frustration among the populace.
Former Black Stars midfielder, Sulley Muntari has disclosed that he is not interested in playing football anymore.
The former Inter Milan and AC Milan ace has left Hearts of Oak after failing to renew his contract with the Ghana Premier League side.
Muntari is currently unattached after leaving the side. The former Portsmouth midfielder signed a six months deal with the Phobian Club midway through last season.
“[To play] outside (Europe), no more, I don’t want to play football anymore,” he told Dan Kwaku Yeboah in an interview on YouTube.
“I only wanted to help the local league gain ground because the local league gave us a lot when we were playing. So I wanted to give back to the local league.
“It’s not that I’m retired or not retired but I just don’t want to play [football], I’m tired but then with friends I train with them. If I decide to play, it will be in the local league but it’s not my priority,” he added.
Muntari scored his first goal for the club in March when he converted a penalty in their 2-1 win against WAFA at the Accra Sports Stadium.
He also surprised many with his fitness and impressive performances, as he helped Hearts to win the President’s Cup and the FA Cup.
Muntari was part of Black Stars squad that qualified the country for the 2006 Mundial in Germany.
He went on to play in the 2010 and 2014 global showpieces.
Muntari won the English FA Cup, the Champions League, and also the Italian Serie A.
Despite backlashes from the general public the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation promised to ensure it delivers on its mandate to collect the fees.
Ghanaians noted that it was not GBC’s mandate to commercialize but only serve as a public institution.
State broadcaster GBC will start its house-to-house collection of TV licence fee from this week in Accra.
Speaking at the launch of the collection campaign at Broadcasting House in Accra, Director General Dr. Kwame Akuffo Anoff-Ntow asked the government to help enforce the collection of the license.
He threw a challenge to the public to hold the corporation to task if it fails to deliver on its mandate.
Meanwhile, the President of Salt and Light Ministry, Rev. Joyce Aryee, has asked the public to desist from comparing the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation to other media houses.
The results of the weekly government Treasury Bill auction held on October 20, 2022, revealed that it was undersubscribed despite the rising rate on the instruments.
The Central Bank accepted bids for GHC 701 million out of a total of GHC 1,124 million.
This is a 37% decrease from the anticipated subscription.
The government was seeking to meet the target in the bid to refinance maturities. The under-subscription will mean that government has to raise revenue to be able to pay maturities in the coming months.
However, with the increase in interest rates on the market, the rate is still lower than the inflation rate of 37.2% according to the Ghana Statistical Service.
Although unclear what may account for the under-subscription of the T-bills it is obvious that investors may be losing confidence in the financial instrument as there appears to be some instability in the market.
Economist George Kwadwo has recommended that entrepreneurs desist from exorbitantly pricing their products and instead consider reducing their profit margins to help them accommodate the current economic atmosphere.
Mr. George Kwadwo believes that as the festive season approaches, there will be a high demand in the Ghanaian market for a variety of products. As a result, he believes that if merchants followed his advice, they could make good money without alienating customers.
As things are,” I think some people would still buy. It is also obvious that people’s incomes have not increased. Since their money is not expanding, they must set priorities”.
He believes that some individuals would continue to purchase given the current circumstances. He added that it is clear that the average incomes of Ghanaians have not increased. He therefore urged consumers to prioritise their expenses.
“What are the most essential things that I need? And so definitely it would affect sales of some items. So they may have to hold on and also probably reduce their profit margin to entice more people to buy, so they have a higher turnover”
Vendors in various markets across the country have recently expressed concern about the historically low sales they continue to record as a result of the country’s sharp rise in product prices.
The cost of food has risen astronomically, as have the prices of some key commodities like petrol.
At the beginning of the year, a 25 liter of vegetable oil was sold at GH₵360.
The commodity, in the month of October, was increased to GH₵600, representing an 80% surge in the price.
In less than a week after the new price adjustment, a 25 liter of cooking oil is now selling at GH₵1,200 or GH₵1,500 in shops in Ghana.
The galloping prices have now turned the commodity into a luxury good.
Some traders have attributed it to increases in petroleum product prices, international market prices, and the rate of the Cedi’s depreciation against other currencies.
“Things are now expensive, and they’re not buying. We come and sit in the market and go back home. We don’t know what is going on. We have kids at home. Those at home are saying the things are expensive, so they don’t even come to the market.They are just increasing prices. We would use our money to go and bring stuff, but they would not buy it,” one trader at Dome market complained.
“Right now a sack of pepper is 4million. We would come and sit here on Saturdays, but they don’t buy. At first, we thought since Saturdays are market days, people would buy a little, but they don’t buy at all” a vendor lamented.
Meanwhile, Finance Minister Mr. Ken Ofori-Atta wants Ghanaians to remain calm as the government puts in the right measures to regain the value of the cedi.
The government of Ghana is hoping to receive as much as $3 billion under an IMF extended credit facility program to bolster its finances and regain access to global capital markets.
The Ministry of Finance has disclosed that Ghana and the IMF have reached a clear path towards the final details of a programme, with the goal of reaching a Staff-Level Agreement by the end of the year.
South Africa-based telecommunications company, Mobile Telephone Network (MTN), has decided to make an investment worth US$150 million in network connectivity infrastructure on the continent.
Chief Executive Officer of MTN Global Connect, Mr Frederic Schepens, who made this known during the inauguration of the company’s Network Operation Centre held in Accra, noted that the investment will improve its products and services in Africa.
This means the telecommunications international connect services, including voice, SMS, signalling and roaming capabilities would be improved.
MTN Global Connect is a digital wholesale and infrastructure services company operating within MTN, managing its international wholesale activities.
It is aimed at offering reliable wholesale and infrastructure solutions to fix connectivity issues and sell mobility solutions.
The Vice President lauded the telecommunication giants for their initiative, noting that it correlates with the government’s plans to transform the economy.
He believes “the tangible sign of Ghana’s digital transformation justifies our vision to benchmark the country against the best in the world.”
MTN Ghana accrued a profit worth GH¢2 billion for the 2021 financial year.
The company recorded a GH¢1.13 billion profit in the previous year. The current profit shows an GH¢87million increase, representing 43.5 percent increase.
MTN Ghana also paid an amount of GH¢2.8 billion as direct and indirect taxes to the government. The amount paid was from a fiscal contribution of GH¢3.1 billion made by the company.
Chairman of the board of MTN Ghana, Dr Ismael Yamson, has assured of the company’s commitment to being a strategic partner to the country’s development.
“In line with our commitment to creating shared value, we continue to make significant contributions through the creation of direct and indirect employment opportunities impacting over 500,000 Ghanaians, as well as interventions to support our people, our cherished customers, and other key stakeholders through the socioeconomic challenges brought about by the pandemic,” he stated.
Nigeria have well and truly made their mark on the Fifa U-17 Women’s World Cup India 2022™.
For their first time in their history, the Africans clinched a place on the podium with a thrilling win over Germany in the match for third place. It came on penalties after the two sides had played out a hugely entertaining 3-3 draw in normal time.
The furthest the Nigerians had progressed at the U-17 world finals before now was the quarterfinals, a stage they reached in 2010, 2012, and 2014. Their record-breaking India 2022 campaign included wins over New Zealand and Chile in the group phase, followed by a penalty-shootout defeat of the USA in the last eight.
Opeyemi Ajakaye, Amina Bello, and Edidiong Etim were the scorers as Nigeria surged into a 3-0 lead in normal time, only for Germany to peg them back with goals from Jella Veit, Paulina Bartz, and Loreen Bender to force a penalty shootout.
Paulina Platner, Bender, and Bartz all missed the spot for the reigning European champions. And though Germany keeper Eve Boettcher saved from Tumininu Adeshina, it was not enough to stop Nigeria from edging the shootout 3-2.
Nigeria use its weapons well
With 20 minutes of the match gone, Ajakaye showed her pace down the right flank, latching on to a fine pass from Taiwo Afolabi, surging into the box, and firing off a shot that Boettcher could not keep out.
Nigeria then showed their set-piece skills to make it 2-0. Miracle Usani, who has excelled throughout the tournament, floated a corner onto the head of the unmarked Bello, who nodded home with aplomb.
The African side’s third also came from a corner, this time taken by Adeshina. Germany’s defense was unable to clear, giving Etim the opportunity to volley the ball past Boettcher.
Germany began their fightback from another dead-ball situation, with Veit getting on the end of a well-flighted free-kick from the left to head in. Veit had a hand in Germany’s second, sending a cross into the box that Laila Portella laid off for Bartz to score from close range.
The equalizer came on the stroke of full-time. When Mathilde Janzen’s curling long-range effort came back off the bar, Bender was there to hook the ball into the net with an acrobatic overhead kick.
Despite Boettcher’s save from Adeshina in the resulting shootout, misses by Platner, Bender, and Bartz gave the Nigerians a 3-2 win on penalties and the best finish they have ever achieved in the competition.
“I’m very happy. I gave my all for the team and I gave my all to keep the ball out. My team is so important to me. We practiced penalties together and I focused very hard so I could save them.” Nigeria goalkeeper Faith Omilana
Ghana’s current high inflation is believed to have been somewhat caused by the printing of a set of GHS100 and GHS200 notes by the Bank of Ghana in November 2019.
A Senior Finance Lecturer at the University of Cape Coast (UCC) Business School, Seyram Kawor, who holds this notion, stated that prices of goods and services saw an upward trend when more money was pumped into the market.
He explained that since more currency chased a limited number of goods, there was a shortage, and with demand exceeding supply, prices increased just as the law of economics prescribes.
“We want to go cash lite society where people will not be using cash. Then, all of sudden, you’ve gone ahead to print new denominations of ₵100 and ₵200. Automatically, certain things that may be bought at ₵95 may go up to ₵100. It is natural for these things to happen.”
“Once currencies are printed, we have prices going up. We have no justification for printing larger denominations. That is the price that we are paying for now,” he said.
According to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, the printing of the notes cost $8.97 million.
In November 2019, inflation stood at 12.2%. After more cedis were printed, inflation fell to 7.8% in January 2020. The rate remained unchanged in the first quarter of 2020.
In April, the rate rose to 10.6%, then to 11.3% in May. The year ended with a rate of 10.4%.
From January to December 2021, inflation hovered between 10.4% and 12.5%. Unlike previous years, 2022 has seen inflation rise consistently, either at an increasing or decreasing rate.
In 2020 and 2021, Ghana battled the COVID-19 pandemic. However, data from the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) shows that inflation remained relatively stable.
At the beginning of this year, inflation stood at 13.9%. As of September 2022, the inflation rate stood 37.2%.
The country is still battling the virus in 2022 and, according to the government, the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine is having an adverse impact on the economy.
As a result, fuel prices on the world market have seen a surge.
Due to the many factors that affect a country’s inflation (food, transport, energy), it is uncertain how much the supply of GHS100 and GHS200 notes in the past three years has affected inflation.
Former Black Stars midfielder, Agyemang Badu has disclosed that missing out on the 2010 FIFA World Cup was a sad moment in his playing career.
The former Asante Kotoko and Udinese Calcio midfielder despite his form in Europe ahead of the Mundial in South Africa was overlooked by the then-head coach, Milovan Rajevac.
According to him, he felt bad after playing a major role during the qualifiers but was dropped by the Serbian trainer.
“I feel very bad because in the qualifiers I scored like three goals so I was in a great form,” the Great Olympics midfielder told Radio Gold.
“I was playing in and out at Udinese and unfortunately, in our last two games before the league went on recess, I got injured.
“I tried my best, the coach wanted me there but I told myself that no, I’m still young, this is my first time.
“I needed to go back to Udinese and have good treatment and I have more years ahead of me.
“It was a sad moment but thank God I was able to sail through and got another opportunity to play in the 2014 FIFA World Cup, it was a sad moment,” he added.
Agyemang-Badu was part of the Black Stars team that played at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
In the midst of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for a financial bailout, “I also want to assure all Ghanaians that no individual or institutional investor, including pension funds, in Government treasury bills or instruments will lose their money, as a result of our ongoing IMF negotiations.”
“There will be no ‘haircuts’, so I urge all of you to ignore the false rumours, just as, in the banking sector clean-up, Government ensured that the 4.6 million depositors affected by the exercise did not lose their deposits,” he added.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo has hinted that Ghana could be securing an agreement with the International Monetary Fund by the end of year.
“We are working towards securing a deal with the IMF by the end of the year. This will give further credence to the measures Government is taking to stabilize and grow the economy, as well as shore up our currency,” he noted.
He further explained that the funds will “repair the short term of public finances and restore our balance of payment whiles we continue to work on the medium to long term structural changes that are at the heart of our goal of constructing a resilient robust Ghanaian economy and building a Ghana Beyond Aid.”
has reassured Ghanaians that their deposits and investments are safe.
Contrary to claims made by some, he stated that there would be “no haircuts” on investments and asked the people to dismiss the aforementioned stories.
On October 30, President Akufo-Addo promised investors and the broader public that their cash would be safe and secure throughout the IMF talks, which are aiming to raise $3 billion.
“I also want to assure all Ghanaians that no individual or institutional investor, including pension funds, in Government treasury bills or instruments will lose their money, as a result of our ongoing IMF negotiations.”
“There will be no ‘haircuts’, so I urge all of you to ignore the false rumours, just as, in the banking sector clean-up, Government ensured that the 4.6 million depositors affected by the exercise did not lose their deposits,” he added.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo has hinted that Ghana could be securing an agreement with the International Monetary Fund by the end of year.
“We are working towards securing a deal with the IMF by the end of the year. This will give further credence to the measures Government is taking to stabilize and grow the economy, as well as shore up our currency,” he noted.
He further explained that the funds will “repair the short term of public finances and restore our balance of payment whiles we continue to work on the medium to long term structural changes that are at the heart of our goal of constructing a resilient robust Ghanaian economy and building a Ghana Beyond Aid.”
Alban Bagbin, the Speaker of Parliament, has said the government made a mistake in embarking on a financial sector clean-up exercise.
In an effort to restore confidence in the banking and specialized deposit-taking sectors, the Bank of Ghana launched a clean-up operation in August 2017.
This operation, according to the Central Bank, was taken to resolve insolvent financial institutions whose continued existence threatened depositors’ interests.
However, the government explained that the action was one of the factors contributing to the country’s high debt stock.
Nonetheless, the Speaker believes that “ It is the focus of every country to ensure they are in control of the banking sector, so if we had Ghanaians with banks having challenges, it was incumbent on us to make them succeed. I think our colleagues in government erred in not seeing it that way.”
The Rt. Hon. Bagbin alleged that the government “tried and ensured that Ghanaians making it in the sector lost”.
He continued that the country has lost GH¢25 billion in a bid to sanitise the banking sector, when the initial plan was to embark on a GH¢5 billion operation exercise to boost the sector.
As of yet, we haven’t been able to sanitize the system, according to Alban Bagbin.
Ofori-Atta supervised the banking sector clean-up from mid-2017 to January 2020.
The clean-up saw a reduction in the number of banks from 34 to 23, while 347 microfinance institutions, 15 savings and loans, and eight finance houses had their licences revoked.
While some of the commercial banks were merged to form the Consolidated Bank Ghana Limited, the state-owned GCB was allowed to swallow others.
The Securities and Exchange Commission also announced that the government spent about GH¢21 billion on the banking clean-up exercise.
In his economic speech on October 30, 2022, the president expressed remorse for occasions in which individuals used unconventional tactics to cause the cedi to depreciate, particularly through speculation.
He urged the people to support the measures the government has already taken to defend the cedi by doing whatever is necessary.
“Fellow Ghanaians, where there is confusion, where there is noise, where there is unrest, you will not find money, as the French would say, l’argent n’aime pas le bruit, to wit, money does not like noise, sika mpe dede.
“If you talk down your money, it will go down. If you allow some unidentifiable person to talk down your money, it will go down,” he stressed.
“The recent turbulence on the financial markets was caused by low inflows of foreign exchange, and was made worse in the last two to three weeks, in particular, by the activities of speculators and the Black Market.
“An anonymous two-minute audio message on a WhatsApp platform predicting a so-called haircut on Government bonds sent all of us into banks and forex bureaus to dump our cedis, and, before we knew it, the cedi had depreciated further.
“All of us can play a part in helping to strengthen the cedi by having confidence in the currency, and avoiding speculation. Let us keep our cedi as the good store of value it is,” he stated.
Then he delivered a word of caution to speculators: “To those who make it a habit of publishing falsehoods, which result in panic in the system, I say to them that the relevant state agencies will act against such persons,” he stressed.
Some steps taken to restore order in the forex markets:
1) enhanced supervisory action by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market to flush out illegal operators, as well as ensuring that those permitted to operate legally abide by the market rules. Already some forex bureaus have had their licenses revoked, and this exercise will continue until complete order is restored in the sector;
2) Fresh inflows of dollars are providing liquidity to the foreign exchange market, and addressing the pipeline demand;
3) the Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in;
4) Government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana to help boost the domestic foreign exchange market; and
5) the Bank of Ghana will enhance its gold purchase programme.
“I am confident that these immediate measures designed to change the structure of our balance of payment flows, sanitise the foreign exchange market to ensure that the banks and forex bureaus operate along international best practices, together with strengthened supervision, will go a long way to sanitize our foreign exchange market, and make it more resilient against external vulnerabilities going forward,” he added.
One major concern that kept running on social media after President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s address to the country on October 30, 2022, was the fact that it wasn’t a live telecast.
In another episode of “Fellow Ghanaians,” President Akufo-Addo’s address centered on the country’s ailing economy and some solutions the government has set aside to salvage the situation.
He also focused on the spiralling cost of living and the immediate reforms which will be implemented to restore economic growth.
But for the first time since the president started addressing the country on television, citizens have rejected the “recorded speech mode” he adopted.
This, broadcaster, Nana Aba Anamoah, has identified, isn’t a good sign.
The popular broadcaster established that if citizens have started escalating “trivial” concerns such as the mode of presentation of the president’s speech, it shows how bad things have become.
Nana Aba, in a Twitter post, said “nothing cuts out for angry people” and this, according to her, is the current state of Ghanaians.
“When people are frustrated and angry, nothing cuts out for them. Nana Akufo-Addo, the anger about your recorded speech should tell you how bad things are in Ghana now. No one complained about recorded weekly fellow Ghanaian speeches during Covid but now see,”
she stated on Twitter.
Read the post below
When the people are frustrated and angry, nothing cuts it for them. @NAkufoAddo the angst about your recorded speech should tell you how bad things are in Ghana now.
No one complained about the recorded weekly fellow Ghanaians speeches during covid but now see…
To properly account for the funds used in 2019 for the banking sector clean-up effort, Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta was requested to do so.
The exercise was a bad choice driven by malign objectives to bring down companies, according to Oscar Yao Doe, Chairman of Doscar Group Holdings.
He claimed that the GH14 billion spent on “cleaning up the industry” should have been applied to a bailout of the financial institutions.
The chairman of Doscar Group Holdings, Oscar Yao Doe has called out the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta, the Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Ernest Addison, a former Senior Partner at KPMG, Nii Amanor-Dodoo and Ose Gyasi, the head of Banking Supervision at the Bank of Ghana (BoG) to give an account of the whopping 14 Billion GHS they purportedly spent on ‘cleansing the Ghana banking sector.
In his public post this morning, Oscar described it as a wrong decision with evil intentions, the spending of such huge resources to achieve the collapse of 11 Ghanaian-owned Banks, over 300 Savings And Loans banks, and Microfinance companies. He once again queried why such an amount was rather not spent on bailouts, to save the institutions from collapse, as done in developed economies like the US and Europe.
HRH Oscar Yao Doe Writes
HRH Oscar Doe
“Breaking News: The Four WIse Men In Ghana?! History Scorecard: These 4: Hon. Ken Ofori-Atta, Gov. Ernest Addison, Nii ‘Deceiver, Amanor-Dodoo, And Osei Gyasi Said They Have Spent 14 Billion Ghana Cedis (Of) Tax Payers’ Money To Destroy 11 Ghanaian Banks, Over 300 Savings And Loans Banks And Microfinance Companies. CONGRATULATIONS To Them. They Are Extremely Wise Men! They Are Very Smart Thinkers!
In 2007/08, The US Government Intervened To Save Their Banks Through Government-Initiated Bailouts. The Effect Of The US Banking Crisis Spilled Over To Europe, And The European Commission Responded Swiftly By Creating Laws Within Their Own Stringent Laws To Pave Way For European Countries To Bailout Their Local Banks. They Did Exactly That.
What Stopped These 4 Men (Ken Ofori-Atta, Ernest Addison, Nii ‘Deceiver’-Dodoo & Osei Gyasi) From Paying Government Of Ghana Contractors Debts Owed To The Ghanaian Banks At The Time? Who Stopped These Wise Men From Helping Our Own Indigenous Businesses To Survive Any Challenges They May Have Been Going Through? Is The Destruction The Only Option? Bold NO! NO!! NO!!!.
The News Could Have Been That We Spent 3 Or 4 Billion Ghana Cedis To Bailout (Save) Our Ghanaian Banks. But Instead, We Are Told 14 Billion GHS Has Been Spent To Cleanse The Banking System In Ghana? In Their Own Grammar! Really? Time Will Tell.
Please Give (Us The) Breakdown To The Nation of How The 14 Billion GHS Was Spent? You Have An Obligation To Give Accounts To The Ghanaian People If You Believe Strongly It’s The Truth.
Using 14 Billion GHS To Kill Dreams And Aspirations Is Madness And Unwise. (It Is A) Wrong Decision (With) Evil Intentions.
The World Bankhas indicated that it will take legal action against the government of Ghana should it continue to withhold audited reports on the Ghana Accountability Learning Outcomes Project (GALOP).
In a letter to the Finance Ministry dated October 21, 2022, World Bank Country Director, Pierre Laporte, reproached the government, noting that it had failed to provide the audit reports on how funds were utilised for almost 10 months, thereby breaching the agreement reached by the International Development Association and the Republic of Ghana.
On January 17, 2022, the International Development Association and the Republic of Ghana signed a Financing Agreement in connection with the Ghana Accountability Learning Outcomes Project (GALOP-Cr. No. 64820-GH).
Per the agreement, Ghana was to provide its audited financial statements no later than six months after the end of such period.
“In accordance with Section 5.09(b)(II) of the General Conditions incorporated by reference in the Financing Agreement and as specified in paragraph II (ii) of the Disbursement and Financial Information Letter (DFIL), the Recipient is required to furnish the audited financial statements covering the period of one fiscal year of the Recipient no later than six months after the end of such period.”
“We note that as of today, October 18, 2022, the Association has not received the audited financial statements for the year ending December 2021 in compliance with the General Conditions,” portions of the letter to the Ministry read.
In line with the Audit Compliance Guidance, the World Bank has provided Ghana a grace period of 30 days, which commenced on October 21, to tender in the audited reports.
According to the World Bank, “we trust that your personal and immediate attention to this matter will ensure speedy compliance of the audit requirements.”
However, failure to do so, the World Bank warned that “the Association may have no option than to explore the possibility of exercising the appropriate legal remedies under the Financing Agreement.”
President Akufo-Addo in June 2020, launched the Ghana Accountability and Learning Outcomes Project, a US$219 million project.The project sought to enable teachers to be equipped in line with the new curriculum, provide learning materials to schools and train heads of schools in school management techniques.
Issues surrounding the project only surfaced in May this year after the Education Minister, Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, was accused of misappropriating $1.2 million from the World Bank; a claim he disputed.
He explained that the money remained in the Education Ministry’s account.
There was the need for clarification after the then Director-General of the Ghana Education Service (GES), Prof Kwasi Opoku-Amankwa, noted that he was unaware that the Ghana Accountability for Learning Outcomes Project had trained over 40,000 teachers on the digital literacy platform (GALOP) in response to a letter from the World Bank seeking confirmation of teacher training.
Before reaching out to the Ghana Education Service, sources say the World Bank asked the Education Ministry for slides for the training courses, as well as examples of the self-assessments teachers were expected to do, but none of these were submitted.
Later, the World Bank confirmed that the Minister did not embezzle the funds as purported.
“As per the protocol, the Ministry of Education provided the details of the number of teachers trained in using distance learning methods, which were verified by the Development Partners Group and accepted by the World Bank.The financing was released upon this confirmation. The World Bank remains committed to supporting Ghana in its efforts to improve education for all,” the World Bank stated.
For years, Ghanaians have hailed talent manager, Bullgod, for contributing to the growth of Shatta Wale’s music career and being by his side through thick and thin.
Although they encountered some challenges with the industry witnessing a breakout, they managed to patch things up. Shatta and Bullgod’s bond and friendship were enviable until a few years ago.
It seems that things have escalated with Shatta Wale claiming that Bullgod was never his manager nor in charge of his affairs.
“I was my own manager and CEO of Shatta Movement till today.
“Stop lying to people that you managed me. I employed you and I was paying you #differentartiste,” read Shatta’s Facebook post.
The award-winning Dancehall musician indicated that the talent manager has for years taken credit for what he personally built through his hard work and dedication in growing the Shatta Movement.
“The lies in this country erh ..No wonder many are not happy with their fellow brothers’ success.”
This comes in after Bullgod in a series of interviews called out his former artiste for diverting from his goal and being ungrateful to the same people who helped shape his brand.
Some few weeks ago, Bullgod posited that Grammy Award-winning Nigerian singer, Burna Boy was living the dream of Shatta adding that the Ghanaian musician can’t record an international breakthrough due to his lack of appreciation.
When DJ Khaled published a video of in his mansion, Bullgod was quick to drug Shatta by offering him a ‘friendly’ piece of advice.
“Shatta Wale all your money cannot buy this right here. I know your time will come but until then, honour those who honour you, it brings more blessings and supernatural growth. Stop being bitter… be happy for everyone,” Bullgod wrote in a Facebook post dated October 13.
The National Lottery Authority ordered the Ghana Lotto Operators Association to pay a 20% Commission to its writers (NLA).
In a statement signed by the GLOA Secretary, Seth Asante Amoani, GLOA and PLO urged their writers to accept the 20% commission, warning their members that failure to do so would result in the operator’s license being revoked and the operator being banned.
Part of the statement read, “In accordance with the NLA’s directive, the executives and members of the Ghana Lotto Operators Association (GLOA) and Private Lotto Operators (PLO) wish to draw the writers’ attention to the fact that the payment on lotto commission is twenty percent (20%) effective October 14, 2022.
Some of the Lotto Operators that have appended their signatures to the joint statement are Rand Lottery, Vision 2020, Asare Original Lotto, Alpha Lotto, Miwor Kakra Yebedi Nti Lotto, Makafui and Sons CO. Ltd., Accurate Giant, Home Co. Limited, Lotto & Lotteries Co. Ltd, Obiri Lotteries, Zinbax Construction & Lottery Services, Wulucky Ghana Limited, Zacdow Company Limited and Sadaco Business Brothers Ventures (SBBV).
In Takoradi, 100 beneficiaries received support for their enterprises during the payout procedure, which took place on Wednesday, October 25th, while in Tarkwa, 227 beneficiaries received support on Thursday, October 26th, 2022.
Speaking at the event, Hajia Abibata Shanni Mahama Zakariah, CEO of MASLOC, expressed sorrow with the recipients, many of whom had lost their stores in the Takoradi temporary market fire catastrophe that occurred six months before.
She noted that the incident has had a significant impact on the businesses and livelihoods of these market women thus necessitating the need for the disbursement of these Group loans.
Madam Abibata Zakariah went on to say that due to the situation described above, she had to increase the number of beneficiaries from an initial 50 individuals to 100 in order to assist them to revamp their businesses.
Beneficiaries who received amounts ranging from 1,000 Ghana cedis to 2,000 Ghana cedis expressed their willingness to repay these loans in order to access an increased amount in future disbursements.
Engaging beneficiaries in Tarkwa, the CEO of MASLOC stated that the market women are a very strategic component in driving the economy and there is always a need to support them with these loans to help boost their business’.
Madam Zakariah, on the other hand, used the occasion to urge all beneficiaries to make a concerted effort to repay these loans which will contribute to the overall goal of sustaining MASLOC’s revolving funds.
In response to press inquiries, she emphasized that the institution’s loans are distributed to Ghanaians between the ages of 18 and 65 who qualify for micro loans to support their businesses.
MASLOC’s Regional Manager Mr. Malik Botwey, went on to say that they had taken steps to fully orient the market women on the terms of the loan and added his voice to the call for these beneficiaries to repay their loans in order to help them access higher amounts in the future.
Speaking to the beneficiaries in Tarkwa, Member of Parliament for Tarkwa Nsuaem Constituency and Deputy Minister of Lands and Natural Resources Hon. George Mireku Duker expressed gratitude to MASLOC for disbursing these loans to beneficiaries in his constituency. He also asserted that he would assist in sensitizing beneficiaries to repay these loans on time so that these disbursements could be extended to many more people in the future.
In addition, Hon. Duker informed the CEO of MASLOC that he has submitted an application for support through the institution’s hire purchase scheme items such as sewing machines, hair dryers, and saloon cars for the youth in his constituency who meet the eligibility requirements.
The disbursements in Takoradi and Tarkwa which forms part of a series of upcoming disbursements was attended by Mr. Paul Sarbeng Deputy CEO for Operations and Mr. Kwabena Asamoah Deputy CEO for Finance and Administration and Mr. Issah Iddrisu Amadu, Head of credit at MASLOC.
As part of his October 30, 2022 address on the economy, the president regretted instances where people have through unorthodox means triggered depreciation of the cedi, especially through speculation.
He charged the populace to do all it takes to protect the cedi by way of complementing efforts that the government has so far put in place.
“Fellow Ghanaians, as the French would say, l’argent n’aime pas le bruit, to wit, money does not like noise, sika mpɛ dede. Where there is chaos, where there is noise, where there is unrest, you will not find money.
“If you talk down your money, it will go down. If you allow some unidentifiable person to talk down your money, it will go down,” he stressed.
He went on to give a diagnosis of the current headache that the currency is facing and identified the role that the Black market and speculators were playing in worsening the plight of the cedi.
“The recent turbulence on the financial markets was caused by low inflows of foreign exchange, and was made worse in the last two to three weeks, in particular, by the activities of speculators and the Black Market.
“An anonymous two-minute audio message on a WhatsApp platform predicting a so-called haircut on Government bonds sent all of us into banks and forex bureaus to dump our cedis, and, before we knew it, the cedi had depreciated further.
“All of us can play a part in helping to strengthen the cedi by having confidence in the currency, and avoiding speculation. Let us keep our cedi as the good store of value it is,” he stated.
Then he delivered a word of caution to speculators: “To those who make it a habit of publishing falsehoods, which result in panic in the system, I say to them that the relevant state agencies will act against such persons,” he stressed.
Some steps taken to restore order in the forex markets:
1) enhanced supervisory action by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market to flush out illegal operators, as well as ensuring that those permitted to operate legally abide by the market rules. Already some forex bureaus have had their licenses revoked, and this exercise will continue until complete order is restored in the sector;
2) Fresh inflows of dollars are providing liquidity to the foreign exchange market, and addressing the pipeline demand;
3) the Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in;
4) Government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana to help boost the domestic foreign exchange market; and
5) the Bank of Ghana will enhance its gold purchase programme.
“I am confident that these immediate measures designed to change the structure of our balance of payment flows, sanitise the foreign exchange market to ensure that the banks and forex bureaus operate along international best practices, together with strengthened supervision, will go a long way to sanitize our foreign exchange market, and make it more resilient against external vulnerabilities going forward,” he added.
He claims that the cost of maintaining the nation’s operations prevents the funding of domestic development initiatives.
At the 11th Ghana Economic Forum, Professor Bokpin warned the government to be prudent with its spending while speaking to GhanaWeb.
“While we are thrilled about the huge potential to raise more money, we must also urge the government to be prudent with its spending since, in this nation, we have been so wasteful that the cost of operating our democracy has been so high.
“The cost of running our democracy in terms of the size of government and all of that is just too huge and at the end of the day, it leaves very little for where money has to go for growth to be engineered,” he intimated.
“Beyond that, we must replicate that across state-owned enterprises. If you look at their staff strength which has gone up since 2017, we are creating deputy CEOs and all of that. This is the best time for Ghana to look at Ghana and say what is tolerable and what cannot be allowed,” he noted.
In light of the new global architecture, the Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, has stated that nations that do not digitalize will lose their competitive advantage.
According to him, once the current economic crisis is resolved, it would reveal which nations had made preparations for competition and which ones had not.
Dr Bawumiarevealed this while speaking at the launch of the MTN Global Connect Customer Success Centre in Accra .
He said “If you do not ensure that you digitalise, you would not be prepared to compete”.
The Vice President predicted that global supply networks would be realigned and that more nations and continents will become more independent in this area..
According to him, this was taking place against the backdrop of the global economy shifting toward the fourth industrial revolution, which was supported by digitalization and driving data and systems.
The Vice President said through digitalisation,Ghana has been developing the systems necessary to get ready for the fourth industrial revolution through the use of digitalization. Among the systems he cited was one for the population’s unique identification.
He added that the government would work to assist MTN’s activities and other investors should think of Ghana as their top choice for doing business on the continent. He also praised MTN for taking this risky step.
Global Connect
Global Connect is an operating entity within the MTN group and a provider of infrastructure and digital wholesale services.
According to the Deputy Minister of Communications and Digitalization Ama Pomaa Boateng, during the past five years, the ministry has worked to lay the groundwork for the ICT industry to develop into a reliable pillar of Ghana’s economy and a major player on the international stage.
She assured that the ministry would continue to fight for the expansion and accessibility of telecoms services in the nation and stressed the importance of the nation having a cyber space that attracted companies like MTN Global Connect.
According to the deputy minister of communications, a large pool of human resources with ICT capabilities is necessary to compete on a global scale, which is why MTN has helped fund the training of several young girls in ICT.
The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of MTN Ghana, Selorm Adadevoh, speaking at the program said due to the MTN’s significant investments in its network infrastructure over the years, it was confident that Global Connect would be a game changer for its stakeholders who were seeking the edge needed in the current digital world, including Ghana.
As the centerpiece of MTN Ghana’s plan to make connection viable and accessible and to enable the entire ecosystem to promote growth and prosperity for Ghana and the subregion at large, he added that the country’s introduction of Global Connect was a tremendous accomplishment for the company.
Mr Adadevoh said “A few years ago, MTN launched ambition 2025 and restated its focus on Africa with action, and today it represents one of those initiatives that continues to advance our belief in the markets in Ghana, particularly, and also in the environment by building and continuing to invest strategically in this markets and we hope and believe these will encourage others to follow suit,”
MTN GlobalConnect manages MTN’s international and national major wholesale activities in addition to offering reliable wholesale and infrastructure solutions for fixed connectivity and wholesale mobility solutions that include international mobile services, Voice interconnect, SMS, signaling and roaming.
In a letter dated October 21 and addressed to Ghana’s finance minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, Pierre Laporte, the International Development Association’s world country director, expressed concerns about the audit statement’s failure to be completed within the agreed-upon six months of the end of a fiscal year.
The World Bank said it would investigate the “possibility of taking the relevant legal remedies under the Financing Agreement” against the government because the submission of the statement is four months overdue.
“In accordance with Section 5.09(b)(ii) of the General Conditions incorporated by reference in the Financing Agreement and as specified in paragraph II (ii) of the Disbursement and Financial Information Letter (DFIL), the Recipient is required to furnish the audited financial statements covering the period of one fiscal year of the Recipient no later than six (6) months after the end of such period. We note that as of today, October 18, 2022, the Association has not received the audited financial statements for the year ending December 2021 in compliance with the General Conditions.
“The Association is concerned that it is almost ten (10) months after the year ended and an independent audit report on the use of funds has still not been furnished to the Association.
“Given that the audited financial statements are now four (4) months overdue, and with the Audit Compliance Guidance, we write to inform you that unless you come into compliance within the next thirty (30) days from the date of this letter, the Association may have no option than to explore the possibility of exercising the appropriate legal remedies under the Financing Agreement,” part of the letter read.
Pierre Laporte has consequently requested Ofori-Atta to attend to the brewing matter in order for the audit requirement to be adhered to.
“We trust that your personal and immediate attention to this matter will ensure speedy compliance with the audit requirements referred to above,” the letter said in part.
Adutwum and GALOP training brouhaha
Education Minister Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum in May this year was allegedly caught up in an alleged phantom training exercise for over 40,000 teachers on the digital literacy platform under GALOP for which World Bank had given $1.2 million.
This came to light after then Director General of the Ghana Education Service (GES) Prof Kwasi Opoku-Amankwa, in a March 30, 2022 letter to the Education Minister said GES was “unaware that any such training has taken place” and further asked him “to advice and provide direction to enable the GES to respond appropriately to the inquiries from the World Bank”.
According to a myjoyonline.com report, the World Bank has written to the then GES D-G after Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum failed to respond by the close of January 14, 2022, on queries into whether or not the training had taken place and claims by Chief Director at the Education Ministry, Benjamin Gyasi, that it has “exceeded the target of 40,000 teachers to be trained, insisting PBC7.2B has been achieved.”
But responding to concerns that the minister had submitted a fictitious report on the training, Press Secretary of MoE, Felix A Baidoo, in a statement flatly denied it claiming it was a smear campaign against the minister.
“Unfortunately, however, it is now clearer than before that those behind such character assassinating reports are deliberately embarking on a vicious smear campaign project against the patriotic, selfless, and hardworking Minister of Education, Dr. Osei Adutwum, for reasons best known to themselves,” it said.
Lawrence Nana Asiamah Hanson known in showbiz circles as Bullgod has criticized President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo over what he described as “arrogant” posture of the country’s leader in the midst of the economic crisis.
The president in an interview on OTEC FM in Kumasi mentioned that some utterances by some citizens appear to suggest that he is governing the country from a distance.
On the back of comments by the people of Kwabre to vote against the New Patriotic Party (NPP) in the 2024 election due to poor road infrastructure in the area, the president said he was not threatened, adding that threats do not frighten him.
Making a submission on GhanaWeb TV’s E-Forum, an episode that focused on how the economic hardship is affecting creatives, Bullgod, a renowned artiste manager, slammed the president questioning the basis for his utterances.
The artiste manager without equivocation said he was irked by the posture and attempts by some sycophants to fight persons who criticize the president.
“You know the annoying bit? People sit back and say ‘why are you making this personal?’ What should we make it? This is personal, it’s affecting all of us. And when you mention Nana Addo’s name, they say ‘why are you mentioning his name?’ Is he not in the office?” Bullgod asked.
“The guy is so arrogant. He says we speak as if he doesn’t live in this country,” Bullgod continued. “Herh! Massa, you dey pay light bill? You dey pay for fuel? Don’t come dey talk the thing you dey talk. We bi kiddies; make we respect you. Talk make we respect you,” he said in Pidgin English – to wit, do you pay for utilities? Do you pay for anything in this country? You’re an elderly man; speak in a manner that courts respect.”
Meanwhile, Bullgod has called for the resignation or impeachment of the president for his abysmal performance. He told host Abrantepa that the economy has been badly managed and that calls for Finance Minister Ken Ofor-Attah should rather be directed at the president instead of the appointee.
The year was 2016, and Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia was the vice presidential candidate at the time.
Dr. Bawumia was everywhere, criticizing the Mahama government in forums and economic lectures while also presenting what at the time seemed to be specially crafted answers to the economic problems the Mahama government was currently facing.
The reintroduction of Ghana to the IMF in 2016 was one of the many topics on which Bawumia displayed his alleged better economic understanding.
In a video that has been making the rounds on social media, the man christened ‘Economic Messiah’ broke down the various issues that culminated in Ghana seeking help from the IMF once more.
He said, “This is how we ended up in the IMF. We were spending too much relative to the revenue which is true. We were borrowing too much which is true. Your external payment position has deteriorated, which is true and your growth is reducing so you ended up at the IMF and the IMF will impose certain conditions which are true, and if you don’t do certain things right the anchor will not hold which is also true. So, I’m not quite sure what it is which is not true what I said. The supporters of this government and this government itself are reluctant to accept.”
Six years on, Bawumia has ascended to the role of Vice President and his government has choked on its own puke by returning the IMF.
The move became necessary after Ghana was unable to access funds from the international market. Ghana’s debt has become unsustainable amid rapid inflation and the free fall of the Ghana cedi.
The country is expecting to receive about $3 billion dollars from the IMF to shore up its reserves and boost investor confidence.
The Member of Parliament(MP) for Nhyiaeso, Stephen Amoah, has argued that dismissing Ken Ofori-Attaas Finance Minister will not solve Ghana’s economic woes, including the Cedi’s depreciation.
In an interview with the media, the MP noted that citizens will be ‘jokers’ to believe that Ofori-Atta’s dismissal will result in the Cedi appreciating.
The lawmaker argued that it would be unfair to put the Finance Minister on the hook for every economic failure because Ghana’s economy as a whole hasn’t been strong in more than 40 years due to its reliance on imports.
“So right now, if we sack the finance minister, the dollar will come to GH₵5? We are jokers as a country. When it comes to finance and economics, there is nothing like maybe. It’s a lazy man’s approach,” he argued.
Mr Amoahwas responding to the calls for Ofori-Atta’s sack and Speaker Alban Bagbin’s comment that the Cedi was appreciating against the dollar as a result of a motion filed by the Minority side of Parliament for a vote of censure against Ofori-Atta.
He added that “We run what we call a negative effective tax rate country.”
Akufo-Addo has recently been under pressure to reshuffle or sack some of his ministers, particularly Ken Ofori-Atta, due to worsening economic conditions.
The president, however, has rejected calls for a reshuffle, claiming that his ministers are performing well.
NPP MPs organized a press conference on October 25 to demand the dismissal of Ofori-Atta and Charles Adu-Boahen, Minister of State at the Ministry of Finance.
The MPs threatened to boycott all government business in parliament if their demands were not met.
Following this, the president held meetings with the MPs where it is reported that he had appealed to them to allow Ken Ofori-Atta, in particular, to complete the IMF negotiations and also present the 2023 Budget and see to its appropriation.
In a statement, the majority stated that MPs’ demands would be “acted upon” after the IMF negotiations are completed and the Budget Statement and Economic Policy are introduced in November 2022, followed by the passage of the Appropriations Bill.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has taken a swipe at his critics over the ongoing negotiations by his government to secure an enhanced domestic programme (EDP) from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the country.
The programme is expected to repair, in the short term, the defects of the 2022 budget, which is said to have been thrown out of gear owing to the global economic crises occasioned by the Russia-Ukraine war.
Some critics, notably economist Kwame Pianim, have taken on the government about its commitment to the negotiations, claiming they are not going well.
“The IMF negotiation is not going well [and] I know this for a fact,” Mr Pianim had stated last week in an interview with TV3‘s Paa Kwesi Asare.
He called for the sacking of the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, whom he described as without credibility to lead negotiations with the Fund, precisely because he did not support the idea of going there in the early stages.
“What the IMF is waiting for is a bold, credible pronouncement from the president as he did over the Covid.”
The latter the President did on Sunday, October 30 but during his national broadcast, he stated emphatically that the negotiations are going well.
“I am able to report to you, my fellow Ghanaians, that the negotiations to secure a strong IMF Programme, which will support the implementation of our Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth and additional funding to support the 2023 Budget and development programme, are at advanced stages, and are going well.”
President Akufo-Addo assured that when a deal is hopefully reached by the end of the year, his government’s economic measures will be further given credence.
“We have gone to the Fund to repair, in the short term, our public finances, and restore our balance of payments, whilst we continue to work on the medium to long-term structural changes that are at the heart of our goal of constructing a resilient, robust Ghanaian economy, and building a Ghana Beyond Aid.”
In response to a letter from the World Bank requesting an audit report from the Finance Ministry about the Ghana Accountability for Learning Outcomes Project, the Ministry of Education has released a statement (GALOP).
The ministry stated that there is no requirement with regard to the GALOP audit report due in 2021.
The Ghana Audit Service is in charge of the audit of GALOP, the Ministry stated in a release dated October 30, 2022.
“The audit’s completion took longer than expected. The report has been completed and submitted, albeit, since the World Bank’s notification.
The World Bank has acknowledged receiving it, it was added.
Background
The international financial institution, World Bank, has threatened to initiate legal action against the government of Ghana within 30 days if it fails to submit audited financial statements on the Ghana Accountability for Learning Outcomes Project (GALOP).
Pierre Laporte, the World Country Director to Ghana, in an October 21 letter addressed to Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta expressed concerns over the delays of the audit statement within the stipulated six months after the end of one fiscal year per the financial agreement between the International Development Association and Ghana.
Owing to the fact that the submission of the statement is four months overdue, the World Bank says it will explore the “possibility of exercising the appropriate legal remedies under the Financing Agreement” against the government.
“In accordance with Section 5.09(b)(ii) of the General Conditions incorporated by reference in the Financing Agreement and as specified in paragraph II (ii) of the Disbursement and Financial Information Letter (DFIL), the Recipient is required to furnish the audited financial statements covering the period of one fiscal year of the Recipient no later than six (6) months after the end of such period. We note that as of today, October 18, 2022, the Association has not received the audited financial statements for the year ending December 2021 in compliance with the General Conditions.
“The Association is concerned that it is almost ten (10) months after the year ended and an independent audit report on the use of funds has still not been furnished to the Association.
“Given that the audited financial statements are now four (4) months overdue, and with the Audit Compliance Guidance, we write to inform you that unless you come into compliance within the next thirty (30) days from the date of this letter, the Association may have no option than to explore the possibility of exercising the appropriate legal remedies under the Financing Agreement,” part of the letter read.
Pierre Laporte has consequently requested Ofori-Atta to attend to the brewing matter in order for the audit requirement to be adhered to.
“We trust that your personal and immediate attention to this matter will ensure speedy compliance with the audit requirements referred to above,” the letter said in part.
Adutwum and GALOP training brouhaha
Education Minister Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum in May this year was allegedly caught up in an alleged phantom training exercise for over 40,000 teachers on the digital literacy platform under GALOP for which World Bank had given $1.2 million.
This came to light after then Director General of the Ghana Education Service (GES) Prof Kwasi Opoku-Amankwa, in a March 30, 2022 letter to the Education Minister said GES was “unaware that any such training has taken place” and further asked him “to advice and provide direction to enable the GES to respond appropriately to the inquiries from the World Bank”.
According to a myjoyonline.com report, the World Bank has written to the then GES D-G after Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum failed to respond by the close of January 14, 2022, on queries into whether or not the training had taken place and claims by Chief Director at the Education Ministry, Benjamin Gyasi, that it has “exceeded the target of 40,000 teachers to be trained, insisting PBC7.2B has been achieved.”
But responding to concerns that the minister had submitted a fictitious report on the training, Press Secretary of MoE, Felix A Baidoo, in a statement flatly denied it claiming it was a smear campaign against the minister.
“Unfortunately, however, it is now clearer than before that those behind such character assassinating reports are deliberately embarking on a vicious smear campaign project against the patriotic, selfless, and hardworking Minister of Education, Dr. Osei Adutwum, for reasons best known to themselves,” it said.
Solomon Nkansah, a former national communications officer for the largest opposition party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), has reaffirmed that if Ghana doesn’t devote determined resources to making the Tema Oil Refinery efficient, its economy will remain excessively vulnerable to market volatility.
He said, “We need to figure out how to internalize our competitive advantage so that we don’t go out and pay money to a refinery in Europe while your facility has been almost completely idle and abandoned.”
According to Solomon Nkansah, if Tema Oil Refinery is run effectively, the nation will be able to keep the foreign cash that would typically be used to buy petroleum goods out of the economy.
“You cannot continue to be an oil-producing country and kick out your refinery. If we knock out the refinery, what it simply means is that you are going to depend on Europe for your economy to run because virtually what your vehicles and engines would consume would have to be imported and that explains why the Ghanaian cedi has never been able to perform well because if are always importing petroleum products , you can imagine how much it takes away from your economy,” Solomon Nkansah told Kwaku Owusu Adjei on Adwenekasa on Accra-based Original FM 91.9.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said that his widely hailed statement about the government knowing how to bring the economy back to life at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic was not made in jest.
In his October 30 address on the economy, President Akufo-Addo pointed to the growth trajectory of the economy amid the pandemic.
He opined that the economy grew at a rate of 7% until Russia invaded Ukraine, further worsening the devastating impact Covid-19 had brought onto the economy.
“We could all see in real-time the devastation that was being wreaked on economies during the pandemic, but I doubt that anyone imagined the extent of the damage. Our economy here in Ghana, like many, many others around the globe, was thrown into turmoil.
“When I said, at the height of the COVID pandemic, that we knew what to do to bring the economy back to life, but not how to bring people back to life, it was not said in jest. We had done it before, and we were on course to doing it again. Ghana’s economy grew by a remarkable 5.4% in 2021, signifying a strong recovery from the 0.5% growth recorded the previous year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“In fact, in the last quarter of 2021, our economy grew at seven percent (7%), only for the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the first quarter of this year to aggravate the effects of COVID-19 and plunge the global economy into even greater turmoil from which it has not yet recovered,” he said
During one of President Akufo-Addo’s Covid-19 updates in 2020, he emphasized the need for the government to focus on deploying measures to save human lives amid the ravaging pandemic.
“We know how to bring the economy back to life. What we do not know is how to bring people back to life,” he said.
The statement by the president won him plaudits from world leaders and heads of relevant agencies and non-governmental organizations.
In the midst of economic turmoil, with many Ghanaians reeling under economic hardship, they have asked the president to actualize his statement by restoring the economy.
This is a result of the Cedi’s substantial depreciation against the US dollar and the noticeably rising price of gasoline on the global fuel market.
“Gasoil’s price per liter is predicted by IES to surpass Gh20.00, with a gallon price potentially reaching Ghc90.00 on the market.
By mid-November 2022, the price of gasoline may also nudge closer to Gh18 per litre, according to an IES press release.
IES observed that the 1.43% fall in the price of LPG on the world market may not translate into a reduction at the domestic pump, “as it may offset Cedi’s depreciation, and rather force the price of the commodity to rise further in the coming days”
Prices of various finished products on the local fuel market saw repeated changes in the just-ended pricing window.
“Every Oil Marketing Company (OMC) monitored by the Institute for Energy Security (IES) reviewed their prices upwards twice or more; prior to the end of the pricing window. The current figures at the pumps suggest the national average price per litre of Gasoline is Gh¢16.94, up from Gh¢11.05 in the last window, representing a significant increase of 53%. Gasoil’s national average price per litre jumped to Gh¢18.76 from Gh¢13.98, representing an increase of 34%.”
In the last pricing window, the IES MarketScan picked Petrosol, Engen, Sel, and Compass Oleum as OMCs with the highest-priced fuel on the market. Zen Petroleum, Benab Oil, Star Oil, and Goodness Oil were spotted as the OMCs with the least-priced fuel on the market at the end of the window.
Before the nation’s next election in December 2024, Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbinhas promised to give Ghanaians a law that forbids same-sex-related activities.
Speaking at a media engagement, Rt. Hon Bagbin emphasized that “the sexual rights and human values Bill that is being handled by the committee will definitely be passed before the next elections. That Bill will go through.”
For the umpteenth time, the Speaker has pledged to see to the passage of the bill that was presented to the House in August 2021 by eight parliamentarians led by Ningo-Prampram MP, Sam George.
His previous comments sparked controversy and among those who found fault with the Speaker’s unwavering stance is Majority leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu.
The Majority leader argued that it is out of place for the Speaker, Alban Bagbin, to have made a predetermination concerning the bill since he technically is not a parliamentarian and thus cannot make such a commitment on behalf of Parliament.
The proponents of the Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values 2021 bill are seeking to criminalise the LGBTQ community in Ghana.
Should it be passed, people who identify as LGBTQ and/or engage in the said practice could face up to five years in prison.
LGBT activists could also face up to a 10-year-jail time.
Portions of the bill proposed that “a person who, by use of media, technological platform, technological account or any other means, produces, procures, markets, broadcasts, disseminates, publishes or distributes a material for purposes of promoting an activity prohibited under the Bill, or a person uses an electronic device, the Internet service, a film, or any other device capable of electronic storage or transmission to produce, procure, market, broadcast, disseminate, publishes or distribute a material for purposes of promoting an activity prohibited under the Bill, commits an offence and is liable on summary conviction to a term of imprisonment of not less than five years and not more than ten years.”
Following the presentation of the bill, the Constitutional and Legal Affairs Committee in Parliament held several public hearings after receiving over 124 memoranda from the public.
It has been over a year and Ghanaians cannot categorically state that the country’s laws explicitly ban homosexuality, although there are arguments that customs and traditions do not tolerate same-sex related activities.
One of the major issues that have arisen is the purported infringement of rights, as the bill seeks to deter citizens from sympathizing with the LGBTQ community.
A group, Concerned Citizens, has noted that the “dangerous bill” limits the democratic rights of Ghanaians.
As the country continues to deliberate on the matter, there are reports that an anti-LGBTQ bill will have financial implications for the country.
“If you criminalize it and a person is sentenced to prison, who’s going to feed the person, it affects the national purse,” Chairman of Parliament’s Constitutional,Legal, and Parliamentary Affairs Committee, Kwame Anyimadu Antwi, told JoyNews.
Also, CDD-Ghana has noted that Ghana could lose up to 6% of its annual budget funding should the Anti-LGBT bill pass.
On the matter, Mr Sam Nartey George has argued that the economic consequences that Ghana may face as a result of passing the Anti-LGBT bill will be negligible.
According to him, the country has been faring well with very few grants from international organisations; thus in the event they are withdrawn, the country is well situated to weather the storm.
The Church of Pentecost is one of the many organisations which remain opposed to a country that encourages same-sex activities, be it gay pride or gay marriages.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said the exercise to close down forex buraux that are not complying with the regulations will continue.
This forms part of the measures being introduced by the government to tackle the economic challenges especially the Cedi’s poor performance against the Dollar.
Mr Akufo-Addo said in his address to the nation on Sunday October 30 that “The following actions have been taken thus far: 1) enhanced supervisory action by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market to flush out illegal operators, as well as ensuring that those permitted to operate legally abide by the market rules.”
“Already some forex bureaus have had their licenses revoked, and this exercise will continue until complete order is restored in the sector,” he said.
The other measures are “Fresh inflows of dollars are providing liquidity to the foreign exchange market, and addressing the pipeline demand;
“The Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in;
“Government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana
“The Bank of Ghana will enhance its gold purchase programme.”
In accordance with the provisions of Sections 11 (1) and 12 (f) of the Foreign Exchange Act 2006 (723), the Bank of Ghana has revoked the licence of Trade House and Airport City Forex Bureaux Limited effective October 27, 2022.
This was based on the Non-compliance with rules governing the operations of foreign exchange bureaux including directive on customer identification and issuance of electronic receipt (Bank of Ghana Notice Number: BG/GOV/SEC/2018/16), (i)The Bank of Ghana reserves the right to revoke the licence of any forex bureau if: in the Bank’s opinion, the conduct of any forex bureau is detrimental to the success of the Forex Bureau Scheme;
According to the Head of Other Financial Institutions Supervision Department at the Bank of Ghana, Yaw Sapong, the exercise targeted at ensuring sanity in the forex market is expected to continue across the capital city, Accra in the Greater Accra region.
The two forex bureaus are under the same ownership and were detected by a mystery shopping exercise by the central bank.
The Head of Other Financial Institutions Supervision department of the Central Bank noted that they were not issuing electronic receipts and not requesting valid proof of identity.
Mr. Sarpong said the “two bureaus on several occasions have been found not to be complying.”
“The way they set their prices are detrimental and we think that the licenses of the two bureaus have to be revoked,” he added.
Meta is out almost $35.5 million dollars following the loss of a campaign finance lawsuit filed by Washington state.
NBC News reports that a judge in King County, Washington has ruled that the Facebook parent company has to pay $10.5 million in legal fees to the state and almost $25 million due to “repeated and intentional violations of campaign finance disclosure laws.”
That $25 million is thought to be the biggest campaign finance fine ever in America, per The Seattle Times, for over 800 violations of Washington’s Fair Campaign Practices Act. The fines for legal fees came later, on Friday. Meta is required to pay the state Public Disclosure Commission within 30 days. The agency imposes campaign finance laws.
Washington’s transparency law was passed in 1972, and television stations and newspapers have abided by the law for years—but Meta was not. Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson said in court that the maximum fine was fitting since Facebook had faced the same lawsuit in 2018, filed by his office.
Meta argued against the law, saying that it was unconstitutional because it “unduly burdens political speech” and is “impossible” to observe. In response to Ferguson’s 2018 lawsuit, Facebook paid $238,000 and said it would comply with campaign finance and political advertising transparency laws. Then, instead of following the stipulations, Facebook decided to discontinue selling political ad space in Washington.
According to NBC, the “law requires ad sellers such as Meta to keep and make public the names and addresses of those who buy political ads, the target of such ads, how the ads were paid for, and the total number of views of each ad. Ad sellers must provide the information to anyone who requests it.”
When Meta kept selling ads in Washington, Ferguson sued them in 2020.
Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, leading member of the ruling New Patriotic Party, NPP, has commented about President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s October 30, 2022 address on the economy.
Gabby is particularly excited about the move by government to curb import of some products whiles booting local production capacity of same.
“Government is targetting the ff products: rice, poultry, vegetable oil, tooth picks, pasta, fruit juice, bottled water and ceramic tiles, to curb imports and boost local production,” part of a tweet he posted on October 31 read.
It continued: “Measures must be stringent but well timed to work. President gives a hint of “review” in 6 months.”
Akufo-Addo addresses nation on economic headwinds:
President Akufo-Addo admitted that times are hard economically and that his government is working assiduously to provide relief to the citizenry.
He stressed in an address on the economy that his administration was ready to work towards restoring and resetting the economy on the path of progress and stability.
These views were contained in his October 30, 2022 address to the nation on the state of the economy.
“For us, in Ghana, our reality is that our economy is in great difficulty. The budget drawn for the 2022 fiscal year has been thrown out of gear, disrupting our balance of payments and debt sustainability, and further exposing the structural weaknesses of our economy.
“We are in a crisis, I do not exaggerate when I say so. I cannot find an example in history when so many malevolent forces have come together at the same time,” he added.
“But, as we have shown in other circumstances, we shall turn this crisis into an opportunity to resolve not just the short-term, urgent problems, but the long-term structural problems that have bedeviled our economy.
“I urge us all to see the decision to go to the International Monetary Fund in this light,” he stressed.
On other issues, he updated citizens on progress made with IMF negotiations and also efforts to stabilize the economy in the midst of rapidly depreciating currency and galloping inflation.
A total number of 20,359,448 Ghanaians have been vaccinated as at October 20, 2022, on the COVID-19 Situation data dashboard.
10,449,734 individuals have received the AstraZeneca vaccine, 18,368 individuals have received the Sputnik-V vaccine, 1,065,357 persons have also received the Moderna vaccine, with 5,534,776 individuals receiving the Pfizer-BioNtECH vaccine; and 3,291,213 persons vaccinated with the COVID-19 vaccine by Janssen.
According to the Covid-19 Situation Data dashboard, people who have received at least 1 dose of the vaccine are about 11,837,495, which is 37.3% of the total population.
People who have been fully vaccinated are 8,758,799, which is 27% of the total population. Individuals who received the first booster dose are 2,329,799.
COVID-19 vaccinations reveal that vaccinators spent not more than ten (10) minutes at vaccinations centres all over Ghana after accessing citizens’ experience.
Similarly, an investigation of Ghana’s compliance with the National Vaccination Deployment Plan (NVDP) reveals that access to COVID-19 vaccines among vulnerable groups and eligible individuals is promising but can be improved.
The monitoring, which was carried out by SEND Ghana with funding from the Partnership for Transparency Fund, also revealed that the uptake of COVID-19 vaccines among healthcare workers, teachers, and people with comorbidities was impressive.
According to Madam Anita Awuku, Programme Coordinator, SEND Ghana, who disseminated findings of the assessment in Accra on Thursday, October 27th, said the monitoring showed that generally, satisfaction with the vaccination process was very high.
However, there were some significant gaps in educating clients about the COVID-19 vaccine, potential side effects and how to deal with them, and screening for contraindications to the vaccine.
According to the assessment, the majority of vaccination centres provided hand hygiene facilities, such as alcohol-based sanitizers, and separate waiting areas for vaccine recipients to rest and be temporarily monitored for any immediate adverse effects.
It was discovered that vaccination centres strictly adhered to infection prevention and control measures during vaccination sessions and that all the centres were clean.
Vaccine carriers had enough conditioned ice packs, and most healthcare workers practised hand hygiene.
The assessment suggested that the Ghana Health Service (GHS) hold NDVP refresher sessions for its staff.
It stated that health directors should be encouraged to maintain vaccine uptake promotion efforts in order to contribute to herd immunity.
“Health promotion efforts for the COVID-19 vaccination exercise and subsequent vaccination exercises should adequately address possible side effects and safety, as these are key for vaccine uptake,” the monitoring report said.
The assessment requested that the Ministry of Health and the GHS increase Cold Chain Equipment (CCE) and vaccine logistics across districts.
After months of mounting demand to speak during an economic crisis, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is today addressing the country on economic issues.
The speech follows a three-day emergency Cabinet meeting held at the Eastern Region’s Peduase Lodge to discuss, among other things, the depreciation of the cedi, the status of talks over a program with the International Monetary Fund, and the soaring costs of food and other necessities.
The government has taken steps to help Ghanaians who are suffering from extreme economic challenges, and the president is scheduled to reveal these.
President Akufo-Addo in his recent commentary on the economy has admitted that ‘times are tough’ and that the government will be exploring ways and means to bring relief to Ghanaians.
Ahead of the president’s address, Information Minister and Member of Parliament for Offoase Ayirebi, Kojo Opong-Nkrumah has said that Akufo-Addo has taken key decisions aimed at rebooting the economy.
Law enforcement is investigating an Iowa woman’s claim that her late father was a serial killer who murdered dozens of women over the course of three decades.
In a recent conversation with Newsweek, Lucy Studey revealed her late father, Donald Dean Studey, who died in 2013 at 75, killed 50 to 70 women, most of which were sex workers. Studey also claimed her dad buried the bodies around his property in Thurman, Iowa.
“I know where the bodies are buried,” Lucy told the outlet. “He would just tell us we had to go to the well, and I knew what that meant. Every time I went to the well or into the hills, I didn’t think I was coming down. I thought he would kill me because I wouldn’t keep my mouth shut.”
Now, local, state, and federal authorities are looking into Studey’s claims.
“We are actively investigating this, and who wouldn’t?” Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope told CNN Affiliate KETV. “We have a scene, but we don’t know whether it’s a crime scene,” the sheriff told KETV. “We don’t have victims, bodies. Nothing.”
Aistrope added, “All we have is a woman came forward and told us a story about bodies in a well. We did bring a couple cadaver dogs. Cadaver dogs looked in there or looked around the area, and they did indicate in the area. I’m not going to say it was right over the well, but they did indicate in the area.”
Meanwhile, Ludey’s older sister Susan alleges Lucy’s accusations are false.
“My father was not the man she makes him out to be. He was strict, but he was a protective parent who loved his children … Strict fathers don’t just turn into serial killers… I’m two years older than Lucy. I think I would know if my father murdered,” Susan told Newsweek.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout proposal for Ghana is in advanced stages of negotiation, according to President Akufo-Addo.
In a speech to the nation on Sunday, President Akufo-Addo declared that by the end of the year, the nation would have unlocked an IMF-supported program.
“I am pleased to inform you, my fellow Ghanaians, that the talks to obtain a robust IMF programme, which will support the implementation of our Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth and additional funding to support the 2023 Budget and development program, are well along and at an advanced stage.
“We are determined to secure these arrangements quickly to bring back confidence and relief to Ghanaians. We are working towards reaching a deal with the IMF by the end of the year. This will give further credence to the measures Government is taking to stabilize and grow the economy, as well as shore up our currency.”
For him, the move with the Washington-based lender is crucial as it will largely help to “repair the short term of public finances and restore our balance of payment whiles we continue to work on the medium to long term structural changes that are at the heart of our goal of constructing a resilient robust Ghanaian economy and building a Ghana Beyond Aid.”
He assured that government is committed to restore the economy to good health following measures being taken to stabilize and grow the economy, as well as shore up the currency.
A 75-year-old Pakistani man was released from the Guantanamo Bay detention center and repatriated to his home country.
The man, Saifullah Paracha has been detained at Guantanamo since 2003 for his alleged ties to Al Qaeda, according to NBC News. He has now been “reunited with his family” in Pakistan.
“We are glad that a Pakistani citizen detained abroad is finally reunited with his family,” a statement said from Reprieve, a legal fund that worked with Paracha for his release. Reprieve added that the Foreign Ministry had “completed an extensive interagency process” to have him returned to his country.
During the over 17 years he was held at the U.S. base in Cuba, Paracha was never charged with a crime. Following his eighth time in front of the prisoner review board, he was told in May 2021 that he would be released. The reason for his being discharged wasn’t divulged, with the notification only saying he is “not a continuing threat” to the U.S.
Prior to his detainment, Paracha was a wealthy businessman who lived and owned property in the U.S. He was later caught in Bangkok, Thailand in 2003 amid accusations that he was an Al Qaeda “facilitator” who aided two 9/11 conspirators with a financial transaction. He denied his connection to the terrorist attacks but was still taken to the Bagram airbase in Afghanistan before being transferred to Guantanamo in 2004.
“Saifullah is returning to his family as a frail old man, having been taken from them in the prime of his life. That injustice can never be rectified,” Maya Foa, the executive director of Reprieve, told NBC.
She continued, “The Biden administration deserves some credit for expediting the release of Guantánamo detainees who were never charged with a crime, but the U.S.’ embrace of indefinite detention without trial has done lasting damage.”
Paracha’s son, Uzair was convicted in 2005 in a New York federal court for providing support to terrorism. He was later released and sent back to Pakistan in March 2020 when a judge tossed the witness testimony originally made against him.
Thirty-five detainees are still being kept in Guantanamo Bay, with 18 set to be released. One of those men is Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the man accused of organizing 9/11.
The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin has resurrected the issue about the withdrawal of his military protection as he describes the action as politically motivated.
Mr. Bagbin who questioned the basis for the action says it is puzzling that the state maintained what he calls battalion for the Electoral Commission Boss even after withdrawing the few military personnel attached to his office.
The Ghana Armed Forces in January withdrew the military personnel attached to the security detail of the Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin for his protection
Government has dismissed suggestions that the withdrawal of the military attachment to the Speaker of Parliament by the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) is an attempt to stifle his protection.
But speaking on the issue publicly for the first time during an engagement with the parliamentary press corps, Mr Bagbin listed a number of individuals whose offices are relatively below that of the speaker of Parliament yet enjoying military protection.
“The Chief Justice has a military, as well as Ministers, have their own and each Supreme Court Judge but the EC Chair has a battalion. My brothers at the Ministry of Defense and Interior both have and the Attorney General has his own. The same as the Minister for Finance but the Speaker is not entitled to a military,” he bemoaned.
Nonetheless, Mr. Bagbin assured the public his security is guaranteed regardless of the withdrawal of the military attachment.
Despite Halloween being a slow time at the movies, Dwayne Johnson’s Black Adam still had a decent second weekend at the domestic box office.
Deadline reports that Johnson’s new superhero flick brought in $27.7 million this past Friday to Sunday, a 59 percent decline from its opening weekend. In total, the film has grossed $111.1 million domestically and is now Johnson’s 18th movie to make over $100 million in the U.S.
Black Adam has also pulled in $250 million at the international box office.
While Johnson has seen his biggest box office debut with Black Adam, the movie’s reception has been mixed, with the film rating just 40% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Still, Black Adam was a meaningful project for Johnson, who has been a fan of DC Comics since he was a kid. “I grew up a Superman [fan], and DC! But when I saw my first Black Adam comic, he was badass, he was cool,” Johnson told Complex earlier this month.
“He had brown skin, so I identified with him. And I thought, ‘I want to be that guy!’ So that’s why I’ve been pushing for this movie for so long, for so many years.”
Johnson added, “Hopefully, with Black Adam, little Black and little Brown boys, little boys of color and little girls of color, all kids, will look at Black Adam and the [Justice Society of America] and the cast and the color and the diversity that we have in our cast and crew, and go, ‘I can be that!’”
President Nana Akufo-Addo has confessed publicly that he was distraught and, sometimes, in despair during the COVID-19 outbreak but had to show leadership.
“It was a time of great fear of the unknown, and the entire world felt at risk”, he told Ghanaians in a national address on the crisis-riddled economy on Sunday, 30 October 2022.
“Now that we have seen the worst of the COVID-19, I can tell you that there were moments during those times when I was distraught, there were moments when I was in despair about the apparent inadequacy of our health facilities, and there were moments when I wondered if the dire predictions made about dead bodies on our streets would truly happen”, he confessed.
“But I knew that I owed it to all of us that, as your president, I had to hold my nerve, show leadership and take us out of the crisis. With your help and support, and the great mercies of the Almighty, we can say that we emerged from the ravages of the pandemic with one of the lowest mortality rates globally. In fact, Ghana’s handling of the pandemic won universal acclaim”, the president added.
He said: “We could all see in real-time the devastation that was being wreaked on economies during the pandemic, but I doubt that anyone imagined the extent of the damage. Our economy, here in Ghana, like many, many others around the globe, was thrown into turmoil”.
Read the president’s full speech below:
ADDRESS TO THE NATION BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO, ON THE ECONOMY, ON SUNDAY, 30TH OCTOBER 2022.
Fellow Ghanaians, good evening.
Back in 2020, at the outbreak of the Coronavirus pandemic, I started a regular conversation with you that came to be popularly known as Fellow Ghanaians.
It was a time of great fear of the unknown, and the entire world felt at risk. I came into your homes regularly to tell you what the experts were discovering about the virus, and what we should do.
Now that we have seen the worst of the COVID-19, I can tell you that there were moments during those times when I was distraught, there were moments when I was in despair about the apparent inadequacy of our health facilities, and there were moments when I wondered if the dire predictions made about dead bodies on our streets would truly happen.
But I knew that I owed it to all of us that, as your president, I had to hold my nerve, show leadership and take us out of the crisis. With your help and support, and the great mercies of the Almighty, we can say that we emerged from the ravages of the pandemic with one of the lowest mortality rates globally. In fact, Ghana’s handling of the pandemic won universal acclaim.
We could all see in real time the devastation that was being wreaked on economies during the pandemic, but I doubt that anyone imagined the extent of the damage. Our economy, here in Ghana, like many, many others around the globe, was thrown into turmoil.
When I said, at the height of the COVID pandemic, that we knew what to do to bring the economy back to life, but not how to bring people back to life, it was not said in jest. We had done it before, and we were on course to doing it again. Ghana’s economy grew by a remarkable 5.4% in 2021, signifying a strong recovery from the 0.5% growth recorded the previous year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, in the last quarter of 2021, our economy grew at seven percent (7%), only for the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the first quarter of this year to aggravate the effects of COVID-19, and plunge the global economy into even greater turmoil from which it has not yet recovered.
The whole world has been taken aback by the speed with which inflation has eaten away people’s incomes. Economies, big and small, have experienced, over this year alone, the highest rise in cost of living over a generation; the highest rise in government borrowing in over fifty (50) years; the highest rise in inflation for forty (40) years; the steepest depreciation in their currencies to the US dollar over the last thirty (30) years; the fastest peak in interest rates for over twenty (20) years; and the greatest threat of unemployment in peace time; with over a hundred million people being pushed into extreme poverty.
Between the end of 2019 and now, inflation in Ghana has increased by five-fold, in Togo by sixteen-fold, by eleven-fold in Senegal, and by seven-fold in Cote d’Ivoire. In truth, however, the fact that there are petrol queues in France does not make it more tolerable that the trotro price from Kasoa to Circle has doubled in the past one year, nor does it make it any more tolerable that the price of cooking oil goes up every other week.
It is important to state that mentioning the increases in prices worldwide is not meant to belittle the scope of suffering here, but simply to help us put things into some perspective, and, hopefully, learn some useful lessons about how other people are coping.
Fellow Ghanaians, this is why I am back in your homes this evening to ask for your support, as we work together to get our economy back into good shape.
In April, after the Cabinet retreat of the first quarter, and recognising the deteriorating macroeconomy, my government announced a thirty percent (30%) cut in budgetted discretionary expenditures, and a thirty percent (30%) cut in salaries of the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs and political office holders, amongst other measures.
And, since July, when the Government took the difficult decision to go to the IMF to seek support, I have been speaking publicly at different fora on the subject of the economic difficulties we face, especially during my recent tours, so far, of nine (9) regions, and interacting directly with you, the Ghanaian people. It is also true that many of you have felt the need for me to come back to the Fellow Ghanaians format, that brings us all together.
For us, in Ghana, our reality is that our economy is in great difficulty. The budget drawn for the 2022 fiscal year has been thrown out of gear, disrupting our balance of payments and debt sustainability, and further exposing the structural weaknesses of our economy.
We are in a crisis, I do not exaggerate when I say so. I cannot find an example in history when so many malevolent forces have come together at the same time. But, as we have shown in other circumstances, we shall turn this crisis into an opportunity to resolve not just the short-term, urgent problems, but the long-term structural problems that have bedeviled our economy.
I urge us all to see the decision to go to the International Monetary Fund in this light. We have gone to the Fund to repair, in the short term, our public finances, and restore our balance of payments, whilst we continue to work on the medium to long-term structural changes that are at the heart of our goal of constructing a resilient, robust Ghanaian economy, and building a Ghana Beyond Aid.
I am able to report to you, my fellow Ghanaians, that the negotiations to secure a strong IMF Programme, which will support the implementation of our Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth and additional funding to support the 2023 Budget and development programme, are at advanced stages, and are going well.
We are determined to secure these arrangements quickly to bring back confidence and relief to Ghanaians. We are working towards reaching a deal with the IMF by the end of the year. This will give further credence to the measures the Government is taking to stabilize and grow the economy, as well as shore up our currency.
I know that the increasing cost of living is the number one concern for all of us. It is driven by fast escalating fuel prices at the pumps, which is caused by high crude oil prices on the world market and our depreciated currency. I know that this is putting intolerable pressure on families and businesses. I know that people are being driven to make choices they should not have to make, and I know that it has led to the devaluation of capital of traders and painfully accumulated savings. Furthermore, Government is working to secure reliable and regular sources of affordable petroleum products for the Ghanaian market. It is expected that this arrangement, when successful, coupled with a stable currency will halt the escalation of fuel prices and bring relief to us all.
I hear from the market queens also that another factor fueling the high prices is the high margins that some traders are slapping on goods, for fear of future higher costs. I say to our traders, we are all in this together. Please let us be measured in the margins we seek. I have great respect and admiration for the ingenuity and hard work of our traders, especially those that take on the distribution of foodstuffs around the country, and I would hesitate to join in calling them names. I do make a heartfelt appeal that we all keep an eye out for the greater good, and not try to make the utmost profits out of the current difficulties.
In language that every market woman and, indeed, every trader in our country understands, let me say that the basic problem we face is that we are not making as much money as we need to spend, and what little money we do make is going to pay for the debts we have contracted to fund the development projects we must have. Not enough of us are paying our taxes, not enough of us are producing to generate the revenues that we need.
Nevertheless, my ambitions for Ghana remain high. All our children should be educated and trained with skills that will enable us be competitive in the world. We need to close rapidly the infrastructure gap, we need to build a world-class healthcare system, and we need to build confidence in ourselves to make ours the happy and prosperous place it deserves to be.
I believe we can and we will find the means to achieve these goals, even if the immediate measures we have to take are painful.
At the just ended Cabinet Retreat at Peduase Lodge, my government agreed on the framework for the Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth and the IMF support for its implementation, as well as the work being done by the Ministry of Finance in preparation for the 2023 budget. At the Cabinet Retreat, we took some firm decisions that should put us on the path that will take our nation out of the current economic difficulties. Let me try and give you an outline of the main decisions without getting into the technical language that baffles many of us.
To restore and sustain debt sustainability, we plan to reduce our total public debt to GDP ratio to some fifty-five percent (55%) in present value terms by 2028, with the servicing of our external debt pegged at not more than eighteen percent (18%) of our annual revenue also by 2028.
We are committed to improving the revenue collection effort, from the current tax-revenue to GDP ratio of thirteen (13%) to between eighteen and twenty percent (18-20%), to be competitive with our peers in the West Africa Region. The GRA is rolling out an extensive set of measures to support this enhanced revenue mobilisation. All of us must do our patriotic duty, and support the GRA in this exercise.
We are aiming to restore and sustain macroeconomic stability within the next three (3) to six (6) years, with a focus on ensuring debt sustainability to promote durable and inclusive growth while protecting the poor.
We have decided to review the reforms in the energy sector, capping of statutory funds, implementation of the exemptions Act and a new property rate regime. We have decided also to continue with the policy of thirty percent (30%) cut in the salaries of political office holders including the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs, and SOE appointees in 2023, just as we will continue with the thirty percent (30%) cut in discretionary expenditures of Ministries, Departments and Agencies.
My fellow Ghanaians, the success of our efforts at diversifying the structure of the Ghanaian economy from an import-based one to a value-added exporting one is what will, in the long term, help strengthen our economy. We are making some progress with the 1D1F but our current situation requires that we take some more stringent measures to discourage the importation of goods that we can and do produce here.
To this end, we will review the standards required for imports into the country, prioritise the imports, as well as review the management of our foreign exchange reserves, in relation to imports of products such as rice, poultry, vegetable oil, tooth picks, pasta, fruit juice, bottled water and ceramic tiles, and others which, with intensified government support and that of the banking sector, can be manufactured and produced in sufficient quantities in Ghana. Government will, in May 2023, that is six (6) months from now, review the situation. We must, as a matter of urgent national security, reduce our dependence on imported goods, and enhance our self-reliance, as demanded by our overarching goal of creating a Ghana Beyond Aid.
Much as we believe in free trade, we must work to ensure that the majority of goods in our shops and market places are those we produce and grow here in Ghana. That is why we have to support our farmers and domestic industries, including those created under the 1-District-1-Factory initiative, to help reduce our dependence on imports, and allow us the opportunity to export more and more of our products, and guarantee a stable currency that will present a high level of predictability for citizens and the business community. Exports, not imports, must be our mantra! Accra, after all, hosts the headquarters of the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area.
Fellow Ghanaians, as the French would say, l’argent n’aime pas le bruit, to wit, money does not like noise, sika mpɛ dede. Where there is chaos, where there is noise, where there is unrest, you will not find money. If you talk down your money, it will go down. If you allow some unidentifiable person to talk down your money, it will go down.
The recent turbulence on the financial markets was caused by low inflows of foreign exchange, and was made worse in the last two to three weeks, in particular, by the activities of speculators and the Black Market. An anonymous two-minute audio message on a WhatsApp platform predicting a so-called haircut on Government bonds sent all of us into banks and forex bureaus to dump our cedis, and, before we knew it, the cedi had depreciated further. All of us can play a part in helping to strengthen the cedi by having confidence in the currency, and avoiding speculation. Let us keep our cedi as the good store of value it is. To those who make it a habit of publishing falsehoods, which result in panic in the system, I say to them that the relevant state agencies will act against such persons.
Indeed, some steps have been taken to restore order in the forex markets and we are already beginning to see some calm returning. We will not relent until order is completely restored. The following actions have been taken thus far:
Enhanced supervisory action by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market to flush out illegal operators, as well as ensuring that those permitted to operate legally abide by the market rules. Already some forex bureaus have had their licenses revoked, and this exercise will continue until complete order is restored in the sector;
Fresh inflows of dollars are providing liquidity to the foreign exchange market, and addressing the pipeline demand;
the Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in;
Government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana to help boost the domestic foreign exchange market; and the Bank of Ghana will enhance its gold purchase programme.
I am confident that these immediate measures designed to change the structure of our balance of payment flows, sanitise the foreign exchange market to ensure that the banks and forex bureaus operate along international best practices, together with strengthened supervision, will go a long way to sanitize our foreign exchange market, and make it more resilient against external vulnerabilities going forward.
Over the course of this week, I have held several fruitful engagements with the Trades Union Congress and Organised Labour, the Ghana Employers’ Association, the Association of Ghana Industries, the Ghana Association of Banks, the Private Enterprise Federation, the Association of Forex Bureau Operators, the Association of Market Queens and Women, all of whom represent important stakeholders of the Ghanaian economy. They expressed their concerns and proposed solutions on how best to solve our problems. I have been encouraged by the enthusiasm of these interest groups to help Government address these challenges, and I intend to continue these engagements with other groups.
I also want to assure all Ghanaians that no individual or institutional investor, including pension funds, in Government treasury bills or instruments will lose their money, as a result of our ongoing IMF negotiations. There will be no “haircuts”, so I urge all of you to ignore the false rumours, just as, in the banking sector clean-up, Government ensured that the 4.6 million depositors affected by the exercise did not lose their deposits.
Anuanom, menim sɛɛ asetenamu ayɛ din. Nanso, ma obiaa empa aba, monkͻso enya gyidie ɛwͻ mabam mu. Nhyehyɛ yɛ aa ɛtumi maa Free SHS ɛni 1-District-1-Factory ɛbaa mu nu; nhyehyɛ yɛ aa ɛboaa ma yetumi pam corona yariɛ no efri oman ni mu; saa ɛnso na maban ɛ toto niemayie saa mereyi ama ahotͻ aba oman nimu, efri sɛɛ mewͻ gydie sɛɛ ɛko no yɛ Awurade Nyankopͻn ni ko.
Anyɛmimɛi, mile akɛ nibii ewa, shi nyɛ ka shia gbeye. Nyɛ yaanͻ ni nyɛ naa hemͻ kɛ yeli akɛ gbɛjianͻto ni hani free SHS ba min, gbɛjia nͻto ni hani 1-District-1-Factory ba min, gbɛjianͻto ni hani wͻ nyɛ wͻ shwe Corona hela kɛshi wͻ man nɛ min; nakai nͻͻ ni mi amlalo ba to gbɛjianͻ koni hejͻlɛ aba maa min, ejaakɛ, miyɛ hemͻ kɛ yeli ak3, ta, Nyͻnmͻ ta lɛ ni.
My government has always been cognisant of the importance of implementing policies and social interventions to relieve Ghanaians of hardships. It is for this reason that over the first five (5) years in office government reduced electricity tariffs cumulatively by 10.9%, we provided free water and electricity as well as reduced tariffs for the entire population during a whole year of the COVID-19 pandemic; we increased the share of the District Assemblies Common Fund to persons with disabilities by 50%; we exempted Kayayei from market tolls; we expanded the LEAP by one hundred and fifty thousand (150,000) beneficiaries; we expanded School Feeding from 1.6 million children to 2.1 million children; we restored teacher and nursing training allowances; we absorbed the cost of BECE and WASSCE exam registrations for parents; no guarantor is now required to obtain student loans. The Ghanacard is sufficient; and we have implemented free TVET as well as free senior high school education.
It is obvious, fellow Ghanaians, that you have a government that cares. We are determined to restore stability to the economy, and provide relief. We are all in this together, and I am asking for your support to rescue Ghana from the throes of this economic crisis.
I have total confidence in our ability to work our way out of our current difficulties. We are not afraid of hard work. We will triumph, as we have triumphed many times before. Let us unite, and rally around our Republic, its institutions and its democratic values, and insist that, under God, we will emerge victorious from our current difficulties. For this too shall pass, as the Battle is the Lord’s.
I will be coming regularly to keep you updated about the measures your government is making to move our country forward, and tackle our economic challenges.
God bless us all and our homeland Ghana, and make her great and strong.
I thank you for your attention, and have a good evening.
ADDRESS TO THE NATION BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO, ON THE ECONOMY, ON SUNDAY, 30TH OCTOBER 2022.
Fellow Ghanaians, good evening.
Back in 2020, at the outbreak of the Corona virus pandemic, I started a regular conversation with you that came to be popularly known as Fellow Ghanaians.
It was a time of great fear of the unknown, and the entire world felt at risk. I came into your homes regularly to tell you what the experts were discovering about the virus, and what we should do.
Now that we have seen the worst of the COVID-19, I can tell you that there were moments during those times when I was distraught, there were moments when I was in despair about the apparent inadequacy of our health facilities, and there were moments when I wondered if the dire predictions made about dead bodies on our streets would truly happen.
But I knew that I owed it to all of us that, as your president, I had to hold my nerve, show leadership and take us out of the crisis. With your help and support, and the great mercies of the Almighty, we can say that we emerged from the ravages of the pandemic with one of the lowest mortality rates globally. In fact, Ghana’s handling of the pandemic won universal acclaim.
We could all see in real time the devastation that was being wreaked on economies during the pandemic, but I doubt that anyone imagined the extent of the damage. Our economy, here in Ghana, like many, many others around the globe, was thrown into turmoil.
When I said, at the height of the COVID pandemic, that we knew what to do to bring the economy back to life, but not how to bring people back to life, it was not said in jest. We had done it before, and we were on course to doing it again. Ghana’s economy grew by a remarkable 5.4% in 2021, signifying a strong recovery from the 0.5% growth recorded the previous year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, in the last quarter of 2021, our economy grew at seven percent (7%), only for the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the first quarter of this year to aggravate the effects of COVID-19, and plunge the global economy into even greater turmoil from which it has not yet recovered.
The whole world has been taken aback by the speed with which inflation has eaten away people’s incomes. Economies, big and small, have experienced, over this year alone, the highest rise in cost of living over a generation; the highest rise in government borrowing in over fifty (50) years; the highest rise in inflation for forty (40) years; the steepest depreciation in their currencies to the US dollar over the last thirty (30) years; the fastest peak in interest rates for over twenty (20) years; and the greatest threat of unemployment in peace time; with over a hundred million people being pushed into extreme poverty.
Between the end of 2019 and now, inflation in Ghana has increased by five-fold, in Togo by sixteen-fold, by eleven-fold in Senegal, and by seven-fold in Cote d’Ivoire. In truth, however, the fact that there are petrol queues in France does not make it more tolerable that the trotro price from Kasoa to Circle has doubled in the past one year, nor does it make it any more tolerable that the price of cooking oil goes up every other week.
It is important to state that mentioning the increases in prices worldwide is not meant to belittle the scope of suffering here, but simply to help us put things into some perspective, and, hopefully, learn some useful lessons about how other people are coping.
Fellow Ghanaians, this is why I am back in your homes this evening to ask for your support, as we work together to get our economy back into good shape.
In April, after the Cabinet retreat of the first quarter, and recognising the deteriorating macroeconomy, my government announced a thirty percent (30%) cut in budgetted discretionary expenditures, and a thirty percent (30%) cut in salaries of the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs and political office holders, amongst other measures.
And, since July, when the Government took the difficult decision to go to the IMF to seek support, I have been speaking publicly at different fora on the subject of the economic difficulties we face, especially during my recent tours, so far, of nine (9) regions, and interacting directly with you, the Ghanaian people. It is also true that many of you have felt the need for me to come back to the Fellow Ghanaians format, that brings us all together.
For us, in Ghana, our reality is that our economy is in great difficulty. The budget drawn for the 2022 fiscal year has been thrown out of gear, disrupting our balance of payments and debt sustainability, and further exposing the structural weaknesses of our economy.
We are in a crisis, I do not exaggerate when I say so. I cannot find an example in history when so many malevolent forces have come together at the same time. But, as we have shown in other circumstances, we shall turn this crisis into an opportunity to resolve not just the short-term, urgent problems, but the long-term structural problems that have bedeviled our economy.
I urge us all to see the decision to go to the International Monetary Fund in this light. We have gone to the Fund to repair, in the short term, our public finances, and restore our balance of payments, whilst we continue to work on the medium to long-term structural changes that are at the heart of our goal of constructing a resilient, robust Ghanaian economy, and building a Ghana Beyond Aid.
I am able to report to you, my fellow Ghanaians, that the negotiations to secure a strong IMF Programme, which will support the implementation of our Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth and additional funding to support the 2023 Budget and development programme, are at advanced stages, and are going well.
We are determined to secure these arrangements quickly to bring back confidence and relief to Ghanaians. We are working towards reaching a deal with the IMF by the end of the year. This will give further credence to the measures Government is taking to stabilize and grow the economy, as well as shore up our currency.
I know that the increasing cost of living is the number one concern for all of us. It is driven by fast escalating fuel prices at the pumps, which is caused by high crude oil prices on the world market and our depreciated currency. I know that this is putting intolerable pressure on families and businesses. I know that people are being driven to make choices they should not have to make, and I know that it has led to the devaluation of capital of traders and painfully accumulated savings. Furthermore, Government is working to secure reliable and regular sources of affordable petroleum products for the Ghanaian market. It is expected that this arrangement, when successful, coupled with a stable currency will halt the escalation of fuel prices and bring relief to us all.
I hear from the market queens also that another factor fueling the high prices is the high margins that some traders are slapping on goods, for fear of future higher costs. I say to our traders, we are all in this together. Please let us be measured in the margins we seek. I have great respect and admiration for the ingenuity and hard work of our traders, especially those that take on the distribution of foodstuffs around the country, and I would hesitate to join in calling them names. I do make a heartfelt appeal that we all keep an eye out for the greater good, and not try to make the utmost profits out of the current difficulties.
In language that every market woman and, indeed, every trader in our country understands, let me say that the basic problem we face is that we are not making as much money as we need to spend, and what little money we do make is going to pay for the debts we have contracted to fund the development projects we must have. Not enough of us are paying our taxes, not enough of us are producing to generate the revenues that we need.
Nevertheless, my ambitions for Ghana remain high. All our children should be educated and trained with skills that will enable us be competitive in the world. We need to close rapidly the infrastructure gap, we need to build a world-class healthcare system, and we need to build confidence in ourselves to make ours the happy and prosperous place it deserves to be.
I believe we can and we will find the means to achieve these goals, even if the immediate measures we have to take are painful.
At the just ended Cabinet Retreat at Peduase Lodge, my government agreed on the framework for the Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth and the IMF support for its implementation, as well as the work being done by the Ministry of Finance in preparation for the 2023 budget. At the Cabinet Retreat, we took some firm decisions that should put us on the path that will take our nation out of the current economic difficulties. Let me try and give you an outline of the main decisions without getting into the technical language that baffles many of us.
To restore and sustain debt sustainability, we plan to reduce our total public debt to GDP ratio to some fifty-five percent (55%) in present value terms by 2028, with the servicing of our external debt pegged at not more than eighteen percent (18%) of our annual revenue also by 2028.
We are committed to improving the revenue collection effort, from the current tax-revenue to GDP ratio of thirteen (13%) to between eighteen and twenty percent (18-20%), to be competitive with our peers in the West Africa Region. The GRA is rolling out an extensive set of measures to support this enhanced revenue mobilisation. All of us must do our patriotic duty, and support the GRA in this exercise.
We are aiming to restore and sustain macroeconomic stability within the next three (3) to six (6) years, with a focus on ensuring debt sustainability to promote durable and inclusive growth while protecting the poor.
We have decided to review the reforms in the energy sector, capping of statutory funds, implementation of the exemptions Act and a new property rate regime. We have decided also to continue with the policy of thirty percent (30%) cut in the salaries of political office holders including the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs, and SOE appointees in 2023, just as we will continue with the thirty percent (30%) cut in discretionary expenditures of Ministries, Departments and Agencies.
My fellow Ghanaians, the success of our efforts at diversifying the structure of the Ghanaian economy from an import-based one to a value-added exporting one is what will, in the long term, help strengthen our economy. We are making some progress with the 1D1F but our current situation requires that we take some more stringent measures to discourage the importation of goods that we can and do produce here.
To this end, we will review the standards required for imports into the country, prioritise the imports, as well as review the management of our foreign exchange reserves, in relation to imports of products such as rice, poultry, vegetable oil, tooth picks, pasta, fruit juice, bottled water and ceramic tiles, and others which, with intensified government support and that of the banking sector, can be manufactured and produced in sufficient quantities in Ghana. Government will, in May 2023, that is six (6) months from now, review the situation. We must, as a matter of urgent national security, reduce our dependence on imported goods, and enhance our self-reliance, as demanded by our overarching goal of creating a Ghana Beyond Aid.
Much as we believe in free trade, we must work to ensure that the majority of goods in our shops and market places are those we produce and grow here in Ghana. That is why we have to support our farmers and domestic industries, including those created under the 1-District-1-Factory initiative, to help reduce our dependence on imports, and allow us the opportunity to export more and more of our products, and guarantee a stable currency that will present a high level of predictability for citizens and the business community. Exports, not imports, must be our mantra! Accra, after all, hosts the headquarters of the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area.
Fellow Ghanaians, as the French would say, l’argent n’aime pas le bruit, to wit, money does not like noise, sika mpɛ dede. Where there is chaos, where there is noise, where there is unrest, you will not find money. If you talk down your money, it will go down. If you allow some unidentifiable person to talk down your money, it will go down.
The recent turbulence on the financial markets was caused by low inflows of foreign exchange, and was made worse in the last two to three weeks, in particular, by the activities of speculators and the Black Market. An anonymous two-minute audio message on a WhatsApp platform predicting a so-called haircut on Government bonds sent all of us into banks and forex bureaus to dump our cedis, and, before we knew it, the cedi had depreciated further. All of us can play a part in helping to strengthen the cedi by having confidence in the currency, and avoiding speculation. Let us keep our cedi as the good store of value it is. To those who make it a habit of publishing falsehoods, which result in panic in the system, I say to them that the relevant state agencies will act against such persons.
Indeed, some steps have been taken to restore order in the forex markets and we are already beginning to see some calm returning. We will not relent until order is completely restored. The following actions have been taken thus far:
1) enhanced supervisory action by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market to flush out illegal operators, as well as ensuring that those permitted to operate legally abide by the market rules. Already some forex bureaus have had their licenses revoked, and this exercise will continue until complete order is restored in the sector;
2) Fresh inflows of dollars are providing liquidity to the foreign exchange market, and addressing the pipeline demand;
3) the Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in;
4) Government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana to help boost the domestic foreign exchange market; and
5) the Bank of Ghana will enhance its gold purchase programme.
I am confident that these immediate measures designed to change the structure of our balance of payment flows, sanitise the foreign exchange market to ensure that the banks and forex bureaus operate along international best practices, together with strengthened supervision, will go a long way to sanitize our foreign exchange market, and make it more resilient against external vulnerabilities going forward.
Over the course of this week, I have held several fruitful engagements with the Trades Union Congress and Organised Labour, the Ghana Employers’ Association, the Association of Ghana Industries, the Ghana Association of Banks, the Private Enterprise Federation, the Association of Forex Bureau Operators, the Association of Market Queens and Women, all of whom represent important stakeholders of the Ghanaian economy. They expressed their concerns and proposed solutions on how best to solve our problems. I have been encouraged by the enthusiasm of these interest groups to help Government address these challenges, and I intend to continue these engagements with other groups.
I also want to assure all Ghanaians that no individual or institutional investor, including pension funds, in Government treasury bills or instruments will lose their money, as a result of our ongoing IMF negotiations. There will be no “haircuts”, so I urge all of you to ignore the false rumours, just as, in the banking sector clean-up, Government ensured that the 4.6 million depositors affected by the exercise did not lose their deposits.
Anuanom, menim sɛɛ asetenamu ayɛ din. Nanso, ma obiaa empa aba, monkͻso enya gyidie ɛwͻ mabam mu. Nhyehyɛ yɛ aa ɛtumi maa Free SHS ɛni 1-District-1-Factory ɛbaa mu nu; nhyehyɛ yɛ aa ɛboaa ma yetumi pam corona yariɛ no efri oman ni mu; saa ɛnso na maban ɛ toto niemayie saa mereyi ama ahotͻ aba oman nimu, efri sɛɛ mewͻ gydie sɛɛ ɛko no yɛ Awurade Nyankopͻn ni ko.
Anyɛmimɛi, mile akɛ nibii ewa, shi nyɛ ka shia gbeye. Nyɛ yaanͻ ni nyɛ naa hemͻ kɛ yeli akɛ gbɛjianͻto ni hani free SHS ba min, gbɛjia nͻto ni hani 1-District-1-Factory ba min, gbɛjianͻto ni hani wͻ nyɛ wͻ shwe Corona hela kɛshi wͻ man nɛ min; nakai nͻͻ ni mi amlalo ba to gbɛjianͻ koni hejͻlɛ aba maa min, ejaakɛ, miyɛ hemͻ kɛ yeli ak3, ta, Nyͻnmͻ ta lɛ ni.
My government has always been cognisant of the importance of implementing policies and social interventions to relieve Ghanaians of hardships. It is for this reason that over the first five (5) years in office government reduced electricity tariffs cumulatively by 10.9%, we provided free water and electricity as well as reduced tariffs for the entire population during a whole year of the COVID-19 pandemic; we increased the share of the District Assemblies Common Fund to persons with disabilities by 50%; we exempted Kayayei from market tolls; we expanded the LEAP by one hundred and fifty thousand (150,000) beneficiaries; we expanded School Feeding from 1.6 million children to 2.1 million children; we restored teacher and nursing training allowances; we absorbed the cost of BECE and WASSCE exam registrations for parents; no guarantor is now required to obtain student loans. The Ghanacard is sufficient; and we have implemented free TVET as well as free senior high school education.
It is obvious, fellow Ghanaians, that you have a government that cares. We are determined to restore stability to the economy, and provide relief. We are all in this together, and I am asking for your support to rescue Ghana from the throes of this economic crisis.
I have total confidence in our ability to work our way out of our current difficulties. We are not afraid of hard work. We will triumph, as we have triumphed many times before. Let us unite, and rally around our Republic, its institutions and its democratic values, and insist that, under God, we will emerge victorious from our current difficulties. For this too shall pass, as the Battle is the Lord’s.
I will be coming regularly to keep you updated about the measures your government is making to move our country forward, and tackle our economic challenges.
God bless us all and our homeland Ghana, and make her great and strong.
I thank you for your attention, and have a good evening.
Africa Education Watch has criticised the West African Examination Council (WAEC) for the large number of supervisors from the Ghana Education Service (GES) employed in this year’s West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).
The Education think tank, in its 2022 WASSCE Ghana Monitoring Report, revealed that out of the 776 supervisors, about 636, representing 82%, were GES staff.
This implies that 18%, or 140 supervisors, were external to WACE.
Africa Education Watch argues that major representation of GES staff “raises potential Conflict of Interest since the WASSCE pass rateis a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) for school heads and other GES directors.”
They further described the situation as “inadequate and ineffective external supervision” while indicating that centers that had GES supervisors recorded high cases of exam malpractice.
The Education Policy Research and Advocacy Organisation has therefore recommended that WAEC stops using GES staff as external supervisors.
“The GES cannot externally self-supervise their own in an exam in which many GES invigilators, supervisors, including school heads are at the centre of exam fraud for profit,” it explained.
They also want the Ghana Education Service to adopt a KPI that rewards SHS heads based on the record of no examination fraud during WASSCE as “this will checkmate the current KPI for school heads on WASSCE pass rate.”
“GES (should) sanction staff involved in examination fraud per their code of conduct,” the report added.
The 2022 WASSCE, which was written by Ghana alone this time round, commenced on August 1, with Visual Art Project Work options.
The theory papers started on Monday, August 22, 2022. On September 27, 2022, the pre-tertiary exam came to an end. 422,883 candidates from 977 schools sat for this year’s exams.
There was a collaboration between WAEC and the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB) to monitor the printing of questions to prevent leakage.
Despite the joint efforts, questions for the Elective Mathematics 2 and Core Mathematics 2 papers leaked nine hours before their scheduled time to be written, Africa Education Watch reported.
It noted that “the involvement of the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB), a.k.a BNI, in the printing of questions led to minimal incidences of question leakages compared to WASSCE 2021.”
The organization’s 2021 WASSCE Monitoring Report found out that 11 papers had leaked.
According to President Akufo-Addo, actions have been made to bring order back to the foreign exchange markets, and the nation is already beginning to experience a return of calm.
In a speech to the nation on the economy on Sunday night, the President pledged more supervision by the Bank of Ghana in the forex bureau markets and the black market in order to root out illegal operators and make sure those who are legally allowed to operate follow by the market regulations.
He claims that recent dollar infusions are addressing the pipeline need and supplying liquidity to the foreign exchange market.
“The Bank of Ghana has given its full commitment to the commercial banks to provide liquidity to ensure the wheels of the economy continue to run in a stabilized manner, till the IMF Programme kicks in and the financing assurances expected from other partners also come in,” he added.
According to him, government is working with the Bank of Ghana and the oil producing and mining companies to introduce a new legal and regulatory framework to ensure that all foreign exchange earned from operations in Ghana are, initially, paid to banks domiciled in Ghana to help boost the domestic foreign exchange market; and
“I am confident that these immediate measures designed to change the structure of our balance of payment flows, sanitise the foreign exchange market to ensure that the banks and forex bureaus operate along international best practices, together with strengthened supervision, will go a long way to sanitize our foreign exchange market, and make it more resilient against external vulnerabilities going forward” he said.