“Through technology, therefore, we can find a way to make sure that everyone participates to this national reconstruction [economic recovery] that we have to accomplish and recognize that this is the moment in our history, and to handle these concerns,” said Ken Ofori-Atta.
Will it be unpleasant? It will undoubtedly be uncomfortable. But where is the shared weight that we must walk over?
He queried.
“So, I listen to social media and then I look at the statistics. Since we brought the national ID [Identification Card] to the Ghana Revenue Authority, I can find some 60,000 of the people who live in my nice neighbourhood [Labone, Cantonments etc.] – accountants doctors, lawyers – who always blame the informal sector- masons etc. And these 60,000 people are paying nothing and they have been able to convince you that E-Levy is bad because it’s a tax on tax etc”, he added.
He said he’s amazed at how these professionals have been able to convince the informal sector to ‘reject’ the newly introduced e-levy in the 2022 budget.
Speaking at the TUC Economic Dialogue on the 2022 budget, Ken Ofori-Atta said, the introduction of the 1.75% levy on all electronic devices is a way to get everyone to contribute their quota towards the recovery of the local economy.
He said about 60,000 professionals have been highlighted in the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) as persons who do not pay tax.
Ken Ofori-Atta said, “Through technology, therefore, we can find a means of ensuring that everybody contributes to this national reconstruction [economic recovery] that we have to do and recognise that this is the moment in our history, and to tackle these issues. Will it be uncomfortable? Of course, it will be uncomfortable. But where is the shared burden for us to move across? he asked.
“So, I listen to social media and then I look at the statistics. Since we brought the national ID [Identification Card] to the Ghana Revenue Authority, I can find some 60,000 of the people who live in my nice neighbourhood [Labone, Cantonments etc.] – accountants doctors, lawyers – who always blame the informal sector- masons etc. And these 60,000 people are paying nothing and they have been able to convince you that E-Levy is bad because it’s a tax on tax etc”, he added.
On November 17, 2021, Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, during the 2022 budget reading in parliament, announced the introduction of 1.75% tax on all electronic transactions.
According to him, this new directive forms part of strategies to widen the country’s tax net.
He added that the 1.75% tax is also to enhance financial inclusion and protect the vulnerable in the country.
Though this e-levy has received public backlash, the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, has said government will find a way to win the cooperation of the Minority in parliament to accept the e-levy.
The Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta was excellent in the delivery of the 2023 budget statement.
He described the presentation as ‘fantastic, excellent.”
Kamal Deen further said that the government acknowledges that times are hard for Ghanaians hence, drastic measures taken in the 2023 budget statement.
Speaking on the Big Issue with Roland Walker on TV3 Friday November 25 while discussing the budget presentation, he said regarding the embargo placed on employment into the public and civil service that it means “those who have reached retirement age must go for them to be replaced.”
He added “drastic measures needed to be introduced, times are are hard, we have had the president acknowledging that fact, Finance Minister acknowledging, Vice President acknowledging that we are not in normal times.”
The Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta announced in the 2023 budget a freeze on employment into the civil and public service.
He also said there shall be no new government agencies established in 2023.
He said these while presenting the budget in Parliament on Thursday November 23.
Mr Ofori-Atta said as a first step toward expenditure rationalisation, government has approved a number of directives which takes effect from January, 2023.
These are “All Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) and State-Owned-Enterprises (SOEs) are directed to reduce fuel allocations to Political Appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs by 50%. This directive applies to all methods of fuel allocation including coupons, electronic cards, chit system, and fuel depots. Accordingly, 50% of the previous years (2022) budget allocation for fuel shall be earmarked for official business pertaining to MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs;
“A ban on the use of V8s/V6s or its equivalent except for cross country travel. All
government vehicles would be registered with GV green number plates from
January 2023; Limited budgetary allocation for the purchase of vehicles. For the avoidance of doubt, purchase of new vehicles shall be restricted to locally assembled vehicles;
“Only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be
allowed. No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members.”
The Finance Minister added “Accordingly, all government institutions should submit a travel plan for the year 2023 by mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff; As far as possible, meetings and workshops should be done within the official environment or government facilities; Government sponsored external training and Staff Development activities at the Office of the President, Ministries and SOEs must be put on hold for the 2023 financial year; Reduction of expenditure on appointments including salary freezes together with suspension of certain allowances like housing, utilities and clothing, etc.;
“A freeze on new tax waivers for foreign companies and review of tax exemptions for free zone, mining, oil and gas companies; A hiring freeze for civil and public servants, No new government agencies shall be established in 2023; There shall be no hampers for 2022; There shall be no printing of diaries, notepads, calendars and other promotional, merchandise by MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs for 2024; All non-critical project must be suspended for 2023 Financial year.”
Morning show host of Okay FM, Kwame Nkrumah Tikese has lashed out at the Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta’s insistence to stay in office despite wide public calls for his removal.
The host of Ade Akye Abia on Friday, November 25, 2022, descended on the minister citing calls from the majority MPs in parliament who are from the ruling party for his removal from office.
“On the front page of Kwasi Pratt’s Insight Newspaper is a flashback of a story with the headline ‘Why I don’t take salary or per diem – Ofori Atta-speaks.’ But who cares? Super Yaw Ofori-Atta, who cares if you take salary or not?
“Does the man not have a wife and children who will advise him to leave the job for another person to take over? Even your own majority MPs said they will not attend and a lot of them did not show up. Even those who turned up were indifferent,” he stated.
The journalist while ranting about the minister’s continued stay in office raised concerns about Ken Ofori-Atta’s health asking why he wants to be in office despite his health condition.
“Why do you worry yourself that much? You are not even healthy, you are sick. I am bewildered, have you people been corrupted by power that much? You did not get a single cheer yesterday. Who cares if you don’t take a salary? Your own majority MPs say you are incompetent, you only know how to contract loans. Get off!” he said.
“I was expecting you to announce your resignation right after reading the budget,” he added.
The minority in parliament recently moved a motion of censure against Ken Ofori-Atta citing various grounds including conflict of interest, mismanagement of the economy and reporting of wrong data to parliament.
But appearing before an 8-member ad hoc committee set up to hear the motion, Ken Ofori-Atta categorically denied all the seven grounds backing the motion.
But according to Kwame Nkrumah, Ken Ofori-Atta has served his due and should walk away.
“You are currently under impeachment when you recently appeared before the committee you took turns between your left and right eyes to sleep. What at all are you seeking in this world, I don’t understand. You have already made all the money you need to make. Whatever money you spent on Akufo-Addo you have accrued it back because all government dealings are allocated to Enterprise insurance whiles we have SIC… why do you still want to clinch to power?” he questioned.
Don’t you have a wife and children to advise you to resign? – Kwame Nkrumah Tikese pokes Ofori-Atta
The morning show host of Okay FM, Kwame Nkrumah Tikese, has lashed out at the Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, for his insistence to stay in office despite wide public calls for his removal.
The host of Ade Akye Abia on Friday, November 25, 2022, descended on the minister, citing calls from the majority MPs in parliament who are from the ruling party for his removal from office.
“On the front page of Kwasi Pratt’s Insight Newspaper is a flashback of a story with the headline, ‘Why I don’t take salary or per diem – Ofori Atta-speaks.’ But who cares? Super Yaw Ofori-Atta, who cares if you take salary or not?
“Does the man not have a wife and children who will advise him to leave the job for another person to take over? Even your own majority MPs said they would not attend, and a lot of them did not show up. Even those who turned up were indifferent,” he stated.
The journalist, while ranting about the minister’s continuous stay in office, raised concern about Ken Ofori-Atta’s health, asking why he wanted to be in office despite his health condition.
“Why do you worry yourself that much? You are not even healthy, you are sick. I am bewildered, have you people been corrupted by power that much? You did not get a single cheer yesterday. Who cares if you don’t take a salary? Your own majority MPs say you are incompetent, you only know how to contract loans. Get off!” he said.
“I was expecting you to announce your resignation right after reading the budget,” he added.
The minority in parliament recently moved a motion of censure against Ken Ofori-Atta, citing various grounds, including conflict of interest, mismanagement of the economy, and the reporting of wrong data to parliament.
But appearing before an 8-member ad hoc committee set up to hear the motion, Ken Ofori-Atta categorically denied all seven grounds backing the motion.
But according to Kwame Nkrumah, Ken Ofori-Atta has served his purpose and should walk away.
“You are currently under impeachment. When you recently appeared before the committee, you took turns between your left and right eyes to sleep. What at all are you seeking in this world, I don’t understand. You have already made all the money you need to make. Whatever money you spent on Akufo-Addo you have accrued it back because all government dealings are allocated to Enterprise insurance whiles we have SIC… why do you still want to clinch to power?” he questioned.
Government through the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta has announced some 13 measures to rationalise public expenditure.
According to him, these measures are Cabinet directives that are expected to take effect from January 2023.
This comes on the back of several calls by some sections of the public for the government to cut down its expenditure to salvage the economy.
Currently, Ghana’s economy is under pressure, resulting in higher living costs and galloping inflation.
Presenting the 2023 Budget in Parliament on Thursday, Mr Ofori-Atta stated that the measures are “a first step towards expenditure rationalisation.”
The 13 measures are listed below:
All MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs are directed to reduce fuel allocations to Political Appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs by 50%. This directive applies to all methods of fuel allocation including coupons, electronic cards, chit systems, and fuel depots. Accordingly, 50% of the previous year’s (2022) budget allocation for fuel shall be earmarked for official business pertaining to MDAs, MMDAs and SOES;
2. A ban on the use of V8s/V6s or its equivalent except for cross-country travel. All government vehicles would be registered with GV green number plates from January 2023;
3. Limited budgetary allocation for the purchase of vehicles. For the avoidance of doubt, purchase of new vehicles shall be restricted to locally assembled vehicles;
4. Only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be allowed. No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members. Accordingly, all government institutions should submit a travel plan for the year 2023 by mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff;
5. As far as possible, meetings and workshops should be done within the official environment or government facilities;
6. Government-sponsored external training and Staff Development activities at the Office of the President, Ministries and SOEs must be put on hold for the 2023 financial year;
7. Reduction of expenditure on appointments including salary freezes together with suspension of certain allowances like housing, utilities and clothing, etc.;
8. A freeze on new tax waivers for foreign companies and review of tax exemptions for free zone, mining, oil and gas companies;
9. A hiring freeze for civil and public servants
10. No new government agencies shall be established in 2023;
11. There shall be no hampers for 2022;
12. There shall be no printing of diaries, notepads, calendars and other promotional merchandise by MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs for 2024;
13. All non-critical projects must be suspended for 2023 Financial year.
Broadcaster Bridget Otoo has bemoaned the move by the government to remove the daily limits to electronic money transfers that will attract the Electronic Transfer Levy (E-Levy).
The Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, has announced a proposal to review the Electronic Transfer Levy (E-Levy) from its current rate of 1.5 per cent to 1.0 percent.
In addition to the reduction of the rate, Ofori-Attaalso proposed the removal of limits on transfers that will attract the levy.
“Review the E-Levy Act and more specifically, reduce the headline rate from 1.5% to one percent (1%) of the transaction value as well as the removal of the daily threshold,” he said.
Reacting to this in a series of tweets on Thursday, November 24, Bridget Otto said that the government, after promising that the poor would not be affected by the levy, now wants to charge all transactions.
She berated persons who supported the government’s implementation of the level when questions were raised about how it would affect the poor.
“All the town hall meetings about e-levy protecting the poor were just a waste of public funds to feed lies to an already impoverished people.
“When we called gov’t out on its 100 cedi threshold lies, fool soldiers were up on their key boards defending. Here we are!
“So, the footsoldiers I hope you heard him? E levy was already being charged on 5 cedis. Now 1 pesewa sef, it would be charged,” parts of her tweet read.
View the tweets plus the budget statement below:
All the town hall meetings about e-levy protecting the poor were just a waste of public funds to feed lies to an already impoverished people.
When we called gov’t out on its 100 cedi threshold lies, fool soldiers were up on their key boards defending .. Here we are!
The Deputy Finance Minister, Abena Osei Asare has said that investments in Treasury bills will not be affected by the debt restructuring announced by the Finance.
Addressing the press after the 2023 Budget, Madam Asare noted that principals of domestic bondholders or instruments will also not be touched.
This, she said has been confirmed during the budget presentation by the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta.
“T-bills are out of the perimeter of the debt operations. It has been stated clearly,” she assured.
She, however, stated that at the end of the debt restructuring, the Ministry will come out with structures and terms that will ensure that the market corrects itself so that a robust country is built.
The Finance Minister during the 2023 Budget reading, announced plans to restructure Ghana’s debt.
According to him, government will suspend interest payments for domestic bondholders and impose a 30% haircut on foreign bonds.
In the meantime, the Deputy Finance Minister, John Kumah in an interview with JoyNews explained that under the debt restructuring arrangement, domestic bondholders will receive zero interest for 2023.
In the second year, the domestic bondholders will receive only 5% interest and a further 10% interest in the third year. Domestic bondholders can only expect to start receiving their full interest in 2026.
According to Mr Kumah, details of the restructuring will soon be placed before investors.
Meanwhile, the Minority Spokesperson on Finance, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson said the Minority side will reject any attempt by government to pass a law to legalise the restructured arrangement.
He said President Akufo-Addo was dishonest when he announced ‘no haircut.’
In line with efforts to cut down on its expenditure, the government has placed a ban on the use of V8s and V6s by government officials except for cross country travels.
This was announced by the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta during the reading of the 2023 budget and economic policy.
The ban takes effect from January 2023, until further notice.
Additionally, there would be limited budgetary allocation for the purchase of vehicles. “All government vehicles would be registered with GV green number plates from January 2023,” the Minister added.
He also emphasised that “the purchase of new vehicles shall be restricted to locally assembled vehicles.”
Also, only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be allowed. No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members, the Minister stressed.
All government institutions are therefore expected to submit a travel plan for the year 2023 by mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff.
The 2023 budget statement was dubbed “Nkabom budget.”
The Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, presented the 2023 budget to parliament as part of his constitutional mandate. The budget was dubbed the Nkabom to with “togetherness.”
This budget according to the Minister “reflects the country’s resolve to reset the economy and restore macroeconomic stability. But, to do so, we need the support of the people of Ghana and the cooperation and approval of this Parliament.
“Our goal now is to significantly enhance revenues, significantly cut down the cost of running government, significantly expand local production, invest more to protect the poor and vulnerable, continue expanding access to good roads, education and health for every Ghanaian everywhere in Ghana and the diaspora,” he said.
A variety of cost reduction measures put forth by the government will become effective in January 2023.
This was said by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta when he stood before the legislature to submit the budget declaration for 2023.
As a first step toward rationalizing expenditures, the government has adopted the following guidelines, which will go into effect in January 2023, he stated.
The measures outlined are as follows:
● All MDAs, MMDAs, and SOEs are directed to reduce fuel allocations to Political Appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs, and SOEs by 50%. This directive applies to all methods of fuel allocation including coupons, electronic cards, chit systems, and fuel depots. Accordingly, 50% of the previous year’s (2022) budget allocation for fuel shall be earmarked for official business pertaining to MDAs, MMDAs, and SOEs.
● A ban on the use of V8s/V6s or its equivalent except for cross-country travel. All government vehicles would be registered with GV green number plates from January 2023.
● Only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be allowed. No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members. Accordingly, all government institutions should submit a travel plan for the year 2023 by mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff.
● As far as possible, meetings and workshops should be done within the official environment or government facilities.
● Government-sponsored external training and Staff Development activities at the Office of the President, Ministries, and SOEs must be put on hold for 2023 financial year.
● A freeze on new tax waivers for foreign companies and a review of tax exemptions for the free zone, mining, oil, and gas companies;
● A hiring freeze for civil and public servants
● No new government agencies shall be established in 2023;
● There shall be no hampers for 2022;
● There shall be no printing of diaries, notepads, calendars, and other promotional merchandise by MDAs, MMDAs, and SOEs for 2024;
● All non-critical projects must be suspended for the 2023 Financial year.
The presentation of the budget in parliament is in pursuance of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
This allows the Finance Minister to review the budget statement and economic policy of the government and supplementary estimates for the 2023 financial year.
On Thursday, November 24, 2022, the minister delivered the 2023 budget statement and economic strategy to parliament. He stated that the targeted goods make up roughly 45% of the country’s yearly imports, which puts pressure on the cedi.
“Mr. Speaker, as I have already indicated, Ghana’s heavy dependence on imports places tremendous pressure on the Cedi, creating an unfavourable balance of payments position. On average, Ghana’s import bill exceeds US$10 billion annually and is accounted for by a diverse range of items that include iron, steel, aluminium, sugar, rice, fish, poultry, palm oil, cement, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, Toilet roll, toothpick, fruit juices, etc. ,” he said.
“We currently have the capacity as a country to locally produce items that account for about 45 percent of the value of our annual imports. These include rice, fish, sugar, poultry, cement, pharmaceuticals, jute bags, computers, etc. To this end, Government will target these products for import substitution by supporting the private sector, through partnerships with existing and prospective businesses to expand, rehabilitate and establish manufacturing plants targeted at producing these selected items,” the minister said.
The 2022 Budget Statement and Economic Policy has been referred to as a “ka mp dede budget” by the minority leader in parliament, Haruna Iddrisu.
The popular’sika mp dede’ that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo used in his final speech to the nation inspired the Akan expression, which literally translates to ‘debt does not like noise.’
The Minority Leader criticized the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, for excessive borrowing as he stood up to second the motion on the floor of parliament to adjourn the session.
He explained that, with the details of the budget as presented by the minister, and with his own admission that the country is highly-indebted, then the phrase Ɛka mpɛ dede best describes the budget.
“We have heard the honourable Minister of Finance, before this august House, declare Ghana a high-risk, distress debt country. So, Mr. Speaker, this budget is Ɛka mpɛ dede budget and therefore, he’s put the country on the path to debt restructuring, which he has announced as debt exchange program.
“So, Mr. Speaker, this budget is Ɛka mpɛ dede budget because he has announced debt restructuring in the name of a debt exchange program,” he said.
Haruna Iddrisu also appealed to the minister to ensure that he regularizes the government’s borrowing spree.
“Mr. Speaker, my greatest expectation of the minister is to regularize the borrowing under the amended Bank of Ghana act of 2016.
“You have to come back to this House to seek our mandate and authorization for your excessive borrowing from the Bank of Ghana, that needs to be regularized,” he said.
Compared to a goal of GH65.4 billion established in 2022, the prediction indicated an increase of 220 percent.
When he presented the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy on Thursday in front of the whole House of Representatives, Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta made this clear.
Government has inadvertently increased its expenditure projections by GH¢205,431 million (25.6% of GDP) compared to a target of GH¢104 billion, equivalent to 17.6 percent of GDP, representing a 197.5 percent.
Projected Expenditure, he said entailed compensation of employees projected at GH¢45 billion; Goods and Services at GH¢8.05 billion; Interest Payment at GH¢52.6 billion; Grants to other Government Units estimated at GH¢30.08 billion while Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) was projected at GH¢27.7 billion.
“Mr. Speaker, Other Expenditure, mainly comprising Energy Sector Levies (ESL) transfers and Energy Sector Payment Shortfalls is estimated at GH¢26.7 billion.
“This estimate shows a contraction of 0.3 percentage points of GDP in primary expenditures (commitment basis) compared to the projected outturn in 2022 and a demonstration of government’s resolve to consolidate its public finances,” the minister said.
These measures he said included review on electronic levy, reforms to income tax regime, a review of the upper limits for vehicle benefits and the introduction of an additional income tax bracket of 35 percent.
To achieve fiscal consolidation, he said government has proposed the reduction of threshold on earmarked funds from the current 25 percent of tax revenue to 17.5 percent of Tax Revenues and migrate all earmarked funds onto the GIFMIS platforms.
He said government intends to continue with 30 percent cut in the salaries of the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs, and political office holders including those in State-Owned Enterprises.
“We will place a cap on salary adjustment of SOEs to be lower than negotiated base pay increase on Single Spine Salary Structure for each year,” he added.
On November 24, 2022, the Finance Minister revealed it while presenting the 2023 budget to the legislature.
He stated: “V8/V6 vehicles are not allowed to be used, with the exception of cross-country driving.From January 2023, all government vehicles would be registered with GV green license plates.”
“Only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be allowed. No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members…Accordingly, all government institutions should submit a travel plan for the year 2023 in mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff,” he added.
The Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, was in parliament to fulfill his constitutional mandate by presenting the government budget to the House.
The presentation was in accordance with Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution and section 21 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
The minister presented the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy to parliament in a year that has experienced perhaps, the worst forms of economic downturns in the fourth republic.
The government of Ghana has announced some austerity measures in the 2023 budget.
The Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta has announced a ban on employment for civil servants effective January 2023.
Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta told parliament on Thursday, 24 November 2022: “Mr. Speaker, as a first step toward expenditure rationalisation, the Government has approved the following directives which take effect from January 2023: All MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs are directed to reduce fuel allocations to political appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs by 50%”.
“This directive applies to all methods of fuel allocation including coupons, electronic cards, chit system, and fuel depots”, he clarified.
“Accordingly, 50% of the previous year’s (2022) budget allocation for fuel shall be earmarked for official business pertaining to MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs”, the minister noted.
Also, he announced “a ban on the use of V8s/V6s or its equivalent except for cross-country travel”.
“All government vehicles would be registered with GV green number plates from January 2023”.
Further, there would be “limited budgetary allocation for the purchase of vehicles”.
“For the avoidance of doubt, the purchase of new vehicles shall be restricted to locally assembled vehicles”, the minister noted.
“Only essential official foreign travel across government, including SOEs shall be allowed. No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members”.
“Accordingly, all government institutions should submit a travel plan for the year 2023 by mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff”.
“As far as possible, meetings and workshops should be done within the official environment or government facilities”.
“Government-sponsored external training and staff development activities at the office of the president, ministries and SOEs must be put on hold for the 2023 financial year”.
Also, the minister announced a “reduction of expenditure on appointments including salary freezes together with suspension of certain allowances like housing, utilities and clothing, etc”.
“A freeze on new tax waivers for foreign companies and review of tax exemptions for free zone, mining, oil and gas companies”.
“A hiring freeze for civil and public servants. No new government agencies shall be established in 2023”, he added.
Additionally, “there shall be no hampers for 2022”.
2023 BUDGET STATEMENT 1
2023 BUDGET SPEECH
Introduction 1.
Right Honourable Speaker, Honourable Members of Parliament, on the authority of the President of the Republic of Ghana, and in accordance with the requirement under Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution of the Republic of Ghana, I present to you the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy of His Excellency Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
2. Mr. Speaker, I beg to move that this House approves the Budget Statement and Economic Policy of the Government of Ghana for the year ending 31st December, 2023.
3. I also respectfully submit to this House the following statutory reports:
● The 2022 Annual Report on the Petroleum Funds, pursuant to Section 48 of the Petroleum Revenue Management Act, 2011 (Act 815), (as amended); and
● The 2022 Report on the Utilisation of the African Union Levies, pursuant to Section 7 of the African Union Import Levies Act, 2017 (Act 952).
4. Mr. Speaker, this Budget Speech is an abridged version of the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy of Government.
I request the Hansard Department to capture the entire Budget Statement and Economic Policy of Government for the year ending 31st December, 2023.
5. Mr. Speaker, at the outset, permit me to thank you, personally, the leadership of Parliament, Honourable Members of this august House for your individual and collective support, understanding and cooperation the past six years that I have had the honour and privilege to be the Minister responsible for Finance.
6. As we all are fully aware, a lot has happened this year in the economy and more so in recent weeks over my role in the management of the economy.
These are very erratic times and, on behalf of the President of the Republic and, for myself in particular, I am eternally grateful, first, to the leadership of the New Patriotic Party, and the majority leadership and caucus of this House.
And, to the Minority caucus of the National Democratic Congress in Parliament, I thank you, on your decision yesterday to participate fully in the process of passing this budget and, to quote, you stressed how “also mindful” you are “of the timeliness regarding the IMF negotiations and the crucial role a timely presentation of the 2023 budget will play in the advancement” of Ghana’s case in the negotiations with the Fund.
7. I wish to assure this House of my strong commitment and unflinching cooperation in our collective efforts to secure an historic IMF programme very soon; a programme that will assist the country in its post-covid recovery efforts.
Our disagreements notwithstanding, what should never be in doubt, especially in the eyes and ears of the general public, is our common desire to serve the Republic. Our democracy is richer for it.
Let me quote Simón Bolíva;
“In the unity of our nations rests the glorious future of our peoples.”.
8. But Mr. Speaker, The President of the Republic who is in Qatar enjoins us to remember Nehemiah when he said ‘Let us rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem and we will in disgrace.
They replied “Let is start rebuilding”. So they began to work.
9. Mr. Speaker, the year 2022 will go down as one of the most difficult and eventful years in the economic history of our country.
While we continue to deal with the devastating impact of the COVID-19 pandemic which led to significant reduction in our revenues and increased our expenditures enormously, we also have had to contend with the double jeopardy of the Russian-Ukraine war.
What has resulted in unprecedented global crises ravaging all currencies and historic living and inflation levels
10. In the midst of these really challenging times, Parliament has in many, many instances supported Government’s programmes presented to this House.
The eventual passage of the E-levy Act, the Fees and Charges Act, the Exemptions Act and the US$750 million Afrexim Loan, among others, attest to the support received from this august House.
At the same time, the exceptional challenges that the Electronic Levy bill encountered months before it was passed, also attest to the challenges that we must be mindful of going forward.
11. Mr. Speaker, I also wish to express the deep appreciation of Government to the various stakeholders, including Employers’ Associations, Labour Unions, Civil Society, Faith-Based Organizations, Association of Ghana Industries, Ghana Union of Traders Association, Bankers, Academia and Think-Tanks for the support we have received throughout the year, as well as the inputs that have informed and enriched our policy choices. It is, Mr Speaker, when God’s people live together in unity- the Lord bestows His blessings.
A CHALLENGING YEAR
Mr. Speaker, a year ago, I came to present a Budget with significant revenue measures to tackle our fiscal difficulties, finance the transformative agenda of Government and sustain the post COVID-19 recovery. However, what started as a political disagreement over revenue measures in this House, triggered a series of events that significantly undermined the credibility of our budget, consequently leading to serious economic challenges, as investor confidence hit a new low.
13. This manifested in credit rating downgrades which triggered the closure of Ghana’s access to the International Capital Market; tightening domestic financing conditions; and increasing cost of borrowing.
The combined effects of the developments contributed to the rapid depreciation of the cedi and compounded the high debt service levels.
14. Mr. Speaker, our inability to access the International Capital Markets meant that, for the first time in our administration, we did not have the needed foreign currency to complement our forex earnings. ]
We have had to make strenuous efforts to meet our import bill, which exceeds US$10.0 billion annually.
Considering our low foreign earnings, it has been difficult to meet our import requirements including crude oil and petroleum products of about US$400m (GHc4.80 billion) a month.
At the same time, Ministry of Finance still needs to find about US$1.0 billion annually to keep our lights in our homes and workplaces.
15. Mr. Speaker, the demand for foreign exchange to support our unbridled demand for imports undermines and weakens the value of the cedi.
This contributed to the depreciation of the cedi, which has lost about 53.8 percent of its value since the beginning of the year.
Compared to the average 7 percent average annual depreciation of the Cedi between 2017 and 2021, the current year’s depreciation, which is driving the high costs of goods and services for everyone, is clearly an aberration – a very expensive one.
16. The increases in fuel prices (Diesel currently GHS20.5 and Petrol GHS16.8) has led to increases in prices of most goods and services.
Inflation which we managed to bring down from 15.4 percent at the end of 2016 to 7.9 percent at the end of 2019 and remained in single digits till the pandemic hit in March 2020 is now 40.4 percent.
17. It is not only the individuals and households who are adversely affected by the depreciation of the cedi. For us at the Ministry of Finance, the depreciation of the cedi seriously affects our ability to effectively manage our debt.
Indeed, our stock of debt has increased by GHc93 billion this year alone due to the depreciation of the cedi since the beginning of 2022.
Even as the State struggles to raise sufficient revenues, high inflation rates continue to eat away the already meagre wages of the average Ghanaian.
The lesson from this relapse in macro-economic stability makes us even more determined, as your government, to permanently restructure and transform this economy and build resilience.
18. Mr. Speaker, we have been honest with Ghanaians about the economic challenges that the country is facing. H.E. The President pointed out that, never have so many malevolent forces come together, in a perfect storm, to so dramatically impact our lives. The current challenges on the back of two difficult years, since March 2020, have really tested our people and our resolve.
We empathize greatly with all Ghanaians for the undue pressures this has placed on their livelihoods.
We want to commend all of you for your forbearance during these difficult times.
We are confident that together, and with God on our side, we will turn things around.
19. On behalf of His Excellency the President, let me assure all Ghanaians that Government is working to change this negative narrative and demonstrate our resilience as a people and our ability to rebuild for a better future.
We have demonstrated this many times in our country, but more recently between 2017 and 2019. We are resolved that in the next two years, Government would work with you all, with a restless determination, to turn around this economy.
20. Mr. Speaker, in a few hours, the Black Stars will be playing their first game in the 2022 FIFA World Cup tournament in Qatar.
It is clear that we stand united as a nation behind our Black Stars.
A successful passage of the 2023 budget, a successful conclusion of negotiations with the IMF; and, making Ghana’s performance in Qatar 2022, the most successful that is winning the Cup not only for the country but for any African side on the World Cup stage, will, I dare say, bring this most challenging year to a very successful end.
To this, Mr Speaker, we pray. As the bible says ‘behold How good and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity! ……… for there, the Lord commands the blessing” Psalm 133 verse 1-3 Resetting Our Economy
21. Mr. Speaker, events since March 2020 have taught us the pervasive volatility of our world today and the wisdom in the vision of President Akufo-Addo to reset our economy through industrialisation.
This budget reflects our resolve to reset the economy and restore macroeconomic stability. But, to do so, we need the support of the people of Ghana and the cooperation and approval of this Parliament.
Our goal now is to significantly enhance revenues, significantly cut down the cost of running government, significantly expand local production, invest more to protect the poor and vulnerable, continue expanding access to good roads, education and health for every Ghanaian everywhere in Ghana and the diaspora.
22. Mr. Speaker, this Budget is, therefore, anchored on a seven-point agenda aimed at restoring macro-economic stability and accelerating our economic transformation as articulated in the Post-COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG).
These comprise an agenda to:
i. Aggressively mobilize domestic revenue;
ii. Streamline and rationalise expenditures; iii. Boost local productive capacity;
iv. Promote and diversify exports;
v. Protect the poor and vulnerable;
vi. Expand digital and climate-responsive physical infrastructure; and
vii. Implement structural and public sector reforms.
23. To achieve these, there are three (3) critical imperatives: successfully negotiating a strong IMF programme; coordinating an equitable debt operation programme; and attracting significant green investments.
This will enable us to generate substantial revenue, create needed fiscal space for the provision of essential public services and facilitate the implementation of the PC-PEG programme to revitalise and transform the economy.
24. Mr. Speaker, we will undertake the following actions, initiatives, and interventions under the seven-point agenda.
● To aggressively mobilize domestic revenue, we will among others:
Increase the VAT rate by 2.5 percent to directly support our roads and digitalization agenda; Fast-track the implementation of the Unified Property Rate Platform programme in 2023; and
Review the E-Levy Act and more specifically, reduce the headline rate from 1.5% to one percent (1%) of the transaction value as well as the removal of the daily threshold.
● To boost local productive capacity, we will among others:
cut the imports of public sector institutions that rely on imports either for inputs or consumption by 50% and will work with the Ghana Audit Service and the Internal Audit Agency to ensure compliance;
support the aggressive production of strategic substitutes, including the list disclosed at the President’s last address to the nation;
Support large-scale agriculture and agribusinesses interventions through the Development Bank Ghana and ADB Bank;
introduce policies for the protection and incubation newly formed domestic industries to allow them to make the goods produced here competitive for local consumption and also for exports.
● To promote exports, we will among others: ○ expand our productive capacity in the real sector of the economy and actively encourage the consumption of locally produced rice, poultry, vegetable oil and fruit juices, ceramic tiles among others;
● To pursue efficiency in Government expenditures, we will among others:
Implement the Government directives on expenditure measures;
Integrate public procurement approval processes with GIFMIS to ensure that projects approved are aligned with budget allocation;
Review key government programmes to reflect relevance, promote efficiency, and ensure value for money; and ○ Review the efficiency of Statutory Funds
● To implement structural and public sector reform, we will among others:
Impose a debt limit on non-concessional financing;
Undertake major structural reforms in the Public Sector by reviewing the operations of 36 State-owned Enterprises, 8 Special Purpose Vehicles, 90 Joint Venture Companies, 38 Regulatory institutions, 68 Statutory Bodies and 6 Subvented Agencies;
Enforce compliance with legal and regulatory framework on foreign exchange; ○ Initiate measures to overhaul the tax structures in the extractive industry;
Expand the gold purchase programme by Bank of Ghana to support FX Reserve accumulation, promote an LBMA certified gold refinery in Ghana and promote local currency stability;
● To safeguard the social protection programmes, we will among others: Expand social protection programmes such as LEAP, School Feeding, and NHIS for the vulnerable and socially excluded.
25. Mr. Speaker, last year, I presented our plan to get us back to pre-pandemic macrostability and growth levels. More importantly, I shared the President’s strategy to improve the living standards of Ghanaians and address our central challenge – unemployment.
The strategy was anchored on building a Sustainable Entrepreneurial Nation through fiscal consolidation and Job Creation.
I am happy to report that we have piloted the YouStart Programme and launched the District Level programme.
2023 BUDGET STATEMENT 9
26. Mr. Speaker, we now have the commitment of our banks and development partners and are confident that the GHS10 billion, 1 million jobs will be achieved in the next three (3) years.
27. We are now embarking on a journey to fundamentally reposition our economy with the Post-COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG), to be supported by the IMF, World Bank and other friendly sovereigns and the private sector (domestic and international), as our blueprint.
We are mindful that it will require broad-based contributions and sacrifices.
There will be costs to the fiscal adjustments we intend to make in the coming years to sustain our stability, recovery and eventual transformation.
My pledge to this House is that there will be fiscal discipline.
That every pesewa that we ask the Ghanaian people and businesses operating in Ghana to contribute will be spent well.
28. The challenges we face are daunting but we must not lose sight of the greatest strength of being Ghanaian: resilience, entrepreneurial zeal, faith, courage, solidarity and hope.
I, therefore, ask all of us to play a constructive role in getting our nation fully back on track. Ours is a country with real prospects and the challenges notwithstanding, Ghana will rise again, and my faith is premised on the fact that a lot has already been achieved, especially over the course of the Fourth Republic and our policy, as outlined in this budget to reset the economy, if supported will ensure that, indeed, we have not wasted the current global crisis, but used it to make our economy stronger and the progress and prosperity of our people even more assured.
SECTION 2:
GLOBAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK
Economic Growth and Inflation 29. Mr. Speaker, the global environment is fragile, and the outlook remains uncertain.
Global economic activity in 2022, has slowed down more broadly and sharply than anticipated. Economic growth in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies is expected to slow down from 6.7 percent in 2021 to 3.7 percent in 2022, with a similar pattern expected in 2023.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, growth is expected to slow down to 3.6 percent in 2022 and 3.7 percent in 2023, from 4.7 percent in 2021 due to low investment and a worsening trade balance.
30. Overall, global inflation has risen, driven largely by increases in energy and food prices. Inflation in Emerging and Developing Economies has also risen from an average 5.9 percent in 2021 to 9.9 percent in 2022.
The war in Ukraine has further heightened inflationary pressures.
31. The exchange rates across the major international currencies depreciated rapidly by the end of the third quarter of 2022.
As at 23rd November, 2022, the Ghana cedi depreciated cumulatively by 54.2 percent against the US Dollar. Similarly, the Ghana cedi depreciated cumulatively by a 48.5 percent against the British Pound.
Overview of Macroeconomic Performance (Jan-Sep. 2022)
32. Mr. Speaker, I now present to this august House the provisional macroeconomic performance for the first three quarters of 2022 based on available data for the period.
33. To better assess the macroeconomic developments for the first three quarters of the year, permit me to restate the macroeconomic targets set for 2022 as presented in the 2022 Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review: Overall Real GDP growth of 3.7 percent;
Non-Oil Real GDP Growth rate of 4.3 percent; End-period inflation of 28.5 percent; Overall fiscal deficit of 6.6 percent of GDP; Primary surplus of 0.4 percent of GDP; and Gross International Reserves sufficient to cover at least three and half months of imports of goods and services.
34. Mr. Speaker, data on the performance of the economy at the end of the third quarter highlights the continued adverse impact of the challenging global and domestic environment on the economy.
As I indicated earlier, these developments have manifested through rapid exchange rate depreciation, high inflation, unsustainable debt burden, fiscal stress and external sector shocks, among others, despite the monetary and fiscal policy interventions that were deployed in the first three quarters of the year.
35. Mr. Speaker, the economic performance for the first three quarters of the year is summarised as follows:
36. Mr. Speaker, provisional GDP data from Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) published in September 2022 indicate that overall Real GDP for the first half of 2022 recorded an average year-on-year growth of 4.0 percent (3.4 percent in Q1 2022 and 4.8 percent in Q2 2022 respectively).
Non-Oil GDP expanded by 4.1 percent and 6.2 percent in the first and second quarters in 2022, respectively.
The latest data indicates that headline inflation accelerated to 40.4 percent in October 2022, from 37. 2 percent in September and 33.9 percent in August.
The rise in the October inflation was broad-based, driven by both food and nonfood prices.
The Monetary Policy Rate has increased by 1,000 basis points (from 14.5% to 24.5%) since the beginning year as the Central Bank deployed its monetary policy tools to anchor inflation expectations;
Developments on the money market broadly showed rising interest rates across the yield curve.
For example, the discount rate on the 91-day instrument has increased to 32.5 percent as at today from 12.5 percent in December 2021;
The Public Debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 75.9 percent at the end of September 2022, up from 76.7 percent at the end of December 2021.
Gross International Reserves (GIR) stood at US$6,591.8 million, equivalent to 2.9 months of imports cover, at the end of September 2022 from a stock position of US$9,695.2 million (equivalent to 4.3 months imports cover) at the end of December 2021.
Fiscal Developments Summary of Fiscal Performance Q1-Q3 2022
37. Mr. Speaker, the 2022 Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review revised the 2022 fiscal framework against the backdrop of unfavourable global and domestic developments.
The fiscal deficit target was revised to 6.6 percent of GDP down from the 7.4 percent set in the 2022 Budget.
Similarly, the primary balance target was revised upwards to a surplus of 0.4 percent of GDP from a surplus of 0.1 percent.
38. This was on the back of revisions in GDP projections, adjustment in the expected yield from the 2022 revenue measures, adjustments to reflect the 30 percent discretionary expenditure cuts, adjustment in interest payments, and adjustments in the allocation for compensation of employees to incorporate a 15 percent Cost of Living Allowance (COLA), adjustment in exchange rate on account of higher depreciation, and adjustment to the Benchmark Crude oil price.
39. Mr. Speaker, provisional data on Government fiscal operations for January – September 2022 shows a shortfall in revenue performance and a faster execution of expenditures.
This resulted in an overall budget deficit of GH¢41,699 million (7.0% of GDP), against a programmed deficit target of GH¢36,684 million (6.2% of GDP).
The corresponding primary balance for the period was a deficit of GH¢9,597 million (1.6% of GDP), against a deficit target of GH¢5,794 million (1.0% of GDP).
Revenue Performance
40. Mr. Speaker, Total Revenue and Grants amounted to GH¢65,399 million (11.0 percent of GDP), compared with a target of GH¢67,307 (11.4 percent of GDP) and the GH¢49,108 million (10.7 percent of GDP) recorded in the corresponding period in 2021.
The outturn for Total Revenue and Grants represents a shortfall of 2.8 percent compared to the period’s target and year-on-year growth of 33.2 percent.
The shortfall in revenue stemmed from the less robust performance recorded in all the revenue handles for the period.
41. Mr. Speaker, Domestic Revenue for the period amounted to GH¢64,601million (10.9 percent of GDP), falling below the target of GH¢66,503 million (11.2 percent of GDP) by 2.9 percent.
The outturn, however, represents a year-on-year growth of 34.0 percent and constituted 98.8 percent of Total Revenue and Grants.
Expenditure Performance
42. Mr. Speaker, Total Expenditure (including arrears clearance and discrepancy) for the period amounted to GH¢109,421 million (18.5 percent of GDP), above the target 2023 BUDGET STATEMENT
14 of GH¢103,992 million (17.6 percent of GDP) by 5.2 percent. Compensation of Employees amounted to GH¢27,146 million (4.6 percent of GDP), 2.9 percent below the budgetary provision of GH¢27,947 million (4.7 percent of GDP).
The Wage bill constituted 91.3 percent of the total Compensation and amounted to GH¢24,734 million.
43. Interest Payments for the period amounted to GH¢32,101 million (5.4 percent of GDP), against the target of GH¢30,890 million (5.2 percent of GDP) reflecting the higher cost of borrowing and the adverse impact of the currency depreciation on external interest.
Domestic Interest Payments constituted 78 percent of total Interest Payments for the period. Financing Operations
44. Mr. Speaker, the fiscal operations for the period resulted in an overall budget deficit of GH¢44,022 million (7.4% of GDP), against a target of GH¢36,684 million (6.2% of GDP).
The corresponding primary balance for the period was a deficit of GH¢11,921 million (2.0% of GDP), against a deficit target of GH¢5,794 (1.0% of GDP).
45. The fiscal deficit for the period was financed mainly from domestic sources amounting to GH¢37,491 million (6.3% of GDP), accounting for 85.2 percent of the total financing.
Foreign financing for the period amounted to GH¢6,531 million (1.1% of GDP) and accounted for the remaining 14.8 percent of the financing.
Public Debt Developments for January – September 2022
46. Mr. Speaker, provisional debt data as at end September 2022 shows a significant increase in Ghana’s public debt largely due to exogeneous factors.
47. The end-September 2022 provisional figures indicate that total gross public debt stood at GH¢467,371.31 million (US$48,871.34 million), representing approximately 75.9 percent of GDP.
48. The domestic debt component is GH¢195,657.60 million, which is 31.79 percent of GDP, whilst external debt is GH¢271,713.71 million, representing 44.15 percent of GDP.
The increase in the domestic debt is largely on account of rising interest costs. Domestic debt as a share of total public debt reduced from 51.6 percent in 2021 to 41.9 percent as at end September 2022.
49. Mr. Speaker, the external debt as a percentage of the total debt stock is 58.1 percent as at end September 2022.
The sharp growth in the external debt stock is largely driven by the depreciation of the local currency. The depreciation of the Ghana cedi added GH¢93,855.15 million to the external debt stock.
50. Overall, debt accumulation increased from 20.7 percent in 2021 to 32.7 percent as at end September 2022, reflecting the impact of the depreciation of the Ghana cedi on the external debt side.
Outlook for External Sector in 2023 and the Medium Term
51. Mr. Speaker, the external sector performance in the outlook will depend largely on the quick resolution of the Russia-Ukraine war and the outcome of recession fears in advanced economies.
The thrust of the external sector will focus on rebuilding external buffers enough to cover at least three and half months of imports of goods and services to cushion the economy against adverse external shocks.
This will be underpinned by, among others, bilateral support, and strong remittance inflows. Measures by BOG to address the Exchange Rate depreciation
52. Mr. Speaker, the Bank of Ghana will continue to monitor inflation developments and respond appropriately to contain price pressures. Monetary Policy will focus on using the monetary policy rate to, among others, contain inflationary pressures.
53. Since August 2022, the Bank of Ghana has successfully been working with the mining firms, international oil companies, and their bankers to purchase all foreign exchange arising from the voluntary repatriation.
UPDATE ON THE GHANA’S ENGAGEMENT WITH THE IMF FOR A FUNDSUPPORTED PROGRAMME
54. Mr. Speaker, since Government announced its engagement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF or the Fund) for a supported Programme on 1st July, 2022, we have made substantial progress.
The Fund assured Government of its strong commitment and support in these difficult times.
55. Mr. Speaker, Government and the IMF have agreed on programme objectives, a preliminary fiscal adjustment path, debt strategy and financing required for the programme to be in line with the Government’s Post-COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG).
The PC-PEG is Government’s blueprint to restore macroeconomic stability, promote debt sustainability, sustain economic recovery and support structural reforms.
2023 and Medium-Term Overall Macroeconomic Targets
56. Mr. Speaker, guided by the medium-term policy objectives, the following macroeconomic targets are set for the medium-term (2023-2026):
i. Overall Real GDP to grow at an average rate of 4.3 percent;
ii. Non-Oil Real GDP to grow at an average rate of 4.0 percent;
iii. Inflation to be within the target band of 8±2 percent;
iv. Primary Balance on Commitment basis to average 0.8 % of GDP in the 2023- 2026 period; and
v. Gross International Reserves to cover at least 4 months of imports.
57. Mr. Speaker, based on the overall macroeconomic objectives and the mediumterm targets, the following macroeconomic targets are set for the 2023 fiscal year:
i. Overall Real GDP growth of 2.8 percent;
ii. Non-Oil Real GDP growth of 3.0 percent; iii. End-December inflation rate of 18.9 percent
iv. Primary Balance on Commitment basis of 0.7% of GDP; and
v. Gross International Reserves to cover not less than 3.3 months of imports.
Resource Mobilisation and Allocation For 2023
Resource Mobilisation for 2023
58. Mr. Speaker, Total Revenue and Grants is projected at GH¢143,956 million (18.0% of GDP) and is underpinned by permanent revenue measures – largely Tax revenue measures – amounting to 1.35 percent of GDP as outlined in the revenue measures.
Resource Allocation for 2023
59. Mr. Speaker, Total Expenditure (including clearance of Arrears) is projected at GH¢205,431 million (25.6% of GDP).
This estimate shows a contraction of 0.3 percentage points of GDP in primary expenditures (commitment basis) compared to the projected outturn in 2022 and a demonstration of Government’s resolve to consolidate its public finances.
60. Mr. Speaker, the following projections underpin the resource allocation for 2023:
Compensation of Employees is projected at GH¢44,990 million (5.6% of GDP).
Mr. Speaker, Use of Goods and Services is also projected at GH¢8,048 million (1.0% of GDP).
Mr. Speaker, Interest Payment is projected at GH¢52,550 million (6.6% of GDP).
Mr. Speaker, Grants to Other Government Units is estimated at GH¢30,079 million (3.8% of GDP).
Mr. Speaker, Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) is projected at GH¢27,694 million (3.5% of GDP).
Mr. Speaker, Other Expenditure, mainly comprising Energy Sector Levies (ESL) transfers and Energy Sector Payment Shortfalls is estimated at GH¢26,739 million.
Budget Balances and Financing Operations for 2023
61. Mr. Speaker, based on the estimates for Total Revenue & Grants and Total Expenditure (including arrears clearance), the overall Budget balance to be financed is a fiscal deficit of GH¢61,475 million, equivalent to 7.7 percent of GDP.
The corresponding Primary balance is a deficit of GH¢8,925 million, equivalent to 1.1 percent of GDP.
62. Mr. Speaker, I wish to notify you that, Budget items such as Interest Payments, Amortisation and Financing will be adjusted accordingly once Government’s debt management strategy and financing to be provided by international partners in the context of the Fund-supported programme have been finalised.
Revenue Measures
63. Mr. Speaker, Government has consistently indicated its intention to improve the revenue collection effort by leveraging technology to enhance tax administration, identify and register taxable persons and improve tax compliance. 64.
Mr. Speaker, Government has received several proposals for review of the Electronic Transfer Levy and is working closely with all stakeholders to evaluate the impact of the Levy in order to decide on the next line of action which will include revision of the various exclusions.
As a first step, however, the headline rate will be reduced to one percent (1%) of the transaction value alongside the removal of the daily threshold.
65. To this end, the income tax regime will undergo reforms to among others, review the upper limits for vehicle benefits and introduce an additional income tax bracket of 35%.
2023 BUDGET STATEMENT 20
Expenditure Measures
66. Mr. Speaker, key expenditure measures will also be pursued to support the fiscal consolidation process.
In this regard, it is proposed that Government:
i. Reduce the threshold on earmarked funds from the current 25 percent of Tax Revenue to 17.5 percent of Tax Revenues;
ii. Migrate all earmarked funds onto the GIFMIS platforms and ensure they use the GIFMIS platform to process all their revenue and expenditures transactions.
v. Continue with 30% cut in the salaries of the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs, and political office holders including those in State-Owned Enterprises;
vii. Place a cap on salary adjustment of SOEs to be lower-than-negotiated base pay increase on Single Spine Salary Structure for each year;
Fiscal Contingency Planning
67. Mr. Speaker, given the uncertainties about the macroeconomic environment, Government stands ready to deploy additional tools if fiscal outturns require further interventions. On the revenue side, some of the measures that will be identified for the Medium Term Revenue Strategy being designed by Government in the context of the IMF programme could be implemented early on.
On the spending side, MDAs budget allocation for Goods and Services or Domestic CAPEX would be strictly controlled by the quarterly budget allotment system. Key Government Interventions 68.
Mr. Speaker, the present economic challenges have heightened the need to transform our economy through a renewed focus on boosting local capacity for increased export promotion, to expand job creation while protecting the vulnerable.
69. Government is therefore taking active steps to address the impact of these economic shocks on Ghanaians through the seven-point agenda to restore macroeconomic stability and accelerate our economic transformation as articulated in the Post-COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth.
DEVELOPING LOCAL CAPACITY FOR PRODUCTION
70. Mr. Speaker, as I have already indicated, Ghana’s heavy dependence on imports places tremendous pressure on the Cedi, creating an unfavourable balance of payments position.
On average, Ghana’s import bill exceeds US$10 billion annually and is accounted for by a diverse range of items that include iron, steel, aluminum, sugar, rice, fish, poultry, palm oil, cement, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, Toilet roll, toothpick, fruit juices, etc.
71. We currently have the capacity as a country to locally produce items that account for about 45 percent of the value of our annual imports. These include rice, fish, sugar, poultry, cement, pharmaceuticals, jute bags, computers, etc.
To this end, Government will target these products for import substitution by supporting the private sector, through partnerships with existing and prospective businesses to expand, rehabilitate and establish manufacturing plants targeted at producing these selected items.
GhanaCARES “Obaatan pa” Programme
72. Mr. Speaker, it has been two years since the launch of the GhanaCARES programme to mitigate the severe impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy.
Significant achievement has been made with the implementation of agreed activities despite the current macroeconomic challenges.
73. Mr. Speaker, the high food prices and pressures on the local currency validates the current focusof the GhanaCARES Programme to bolster the productive and export capacity of the private sector.
To this end, an Economic Enclave project with focus on providing support for the cultivation of up to 110,000 acres of land in the Greater Accra, Ashanti, Central, Savannah and Oti Regions is being pursued.
74. Mr. Speaker, this initiative which seeks to expand our production and productivity in rice, tomato, maize, vegetables and poultry is being led and coordinated by the Millennium Development Authority (MiDA) in collaboration with other Government institutions such as the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA), Ministry of Energy, Ghana Irrigation Development Authority (GIDA), 48 Engineers Regiment of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) under the Ministry of Defence, the National Entrepreneurial and Innovation Programme (NEIP) and the National Service Secretariat (NSS).
75. Mr. Speaker, consistent with the private sector-led approach, the programme will engage interested private sector actors to expand and agricultural production and processing in the Asutuare-Tsopoli Economic Enclave area based on a Partnership Framework.
The same approach will be adopted for the lands secured in the Ashanti, Central, Savannah and Oti regions.
76. Mr. Speaker, we have also initiated discussions with the Graphic Communication Group Limited to explore the feasibility of producing paper locally using the by-products of the cultivated rice in the Economic Enclave at Asutuare as raw material.
It is envisaged that the imports of paper will be replaced, and more jobs created.
77. Mr. Speaker, in addition to the Enclave Project, GhanaCARES programme in 2023 will continue to offer catalytic support in the following targeted areas.
To this end, the programme will:
● work with DBG to provide funding to interested and targeted farmers
● support MoFA to adopt and deploy the farmer registration database for the farmer input subsidy programme to enhance efficiency;
● support the Ministry of Communication and Digitalisation (MoCD) to establish a tech hub to improve knowledge in Technology and innovation by the youth, in collaboration with the University of Ghana;
● ensure the operationalisation of the Foundry under a sustainable private sector management framework;
● provide interest rate subsidies and direct financing; including supporting prioritised sectors in the rural economy through the ARB Apex Bank and its network of banks as agreed under the AfDB-supported Post-COVID Skills and Productivity Enhancement Project.
YouStart
78. Mr. Speaker, in fulfillment of our pledge of building an entrepreneurial state, the implementation of the YouStart programme began this year.
The programme was successfully piloted with 70 beneficiaries and an amount of GH¢1.98 million was disbursed to support youth-led (below the age of 40 years) SMEs in poultry, agro processing, ICT, textiles, and food processing sectors.
79. Government has successfully signed an MoU with the Ghana Association of Banks (GAB) and eleven (11) other commercial Banks for the implementation of the commercial component of the programme.
80. Mr. Speaker, a launch for the District Entrepreneurship Programme (DEP) component of the programme was held on 14th November, 2022 and it is expected that the launch of the Commercial component of the Programme will occur by the end of 2022 to enable qualified beneficiaries access support.
One District One Factory (1D1F)
81. Mr. Speaker, the One-District-One-Factory (1D1F) Initiative continued to make remarkable progress in 2022.
To date, a total of 296 1D1F projects are at various stages of implementation, out of which 126 are currently operational, 143 are under construction, and 27 are pipeline projects.
82. In 2023, Government will intensify support to existing and new manufacturing enterprises with technical assistance, credit facilitation, and access to electricity and other infrastructure. Automotive Assembly Programme
83. Mr. Speaker, in addition to the Automotive Assembly Programme, Government has developed a new Components Manufacturing Policy which seeks to support the local production and supply of components and spare parts for the automotive industry.
The Ministry of Trade and Industry will launch and commence implementation of the policy in 2023 which is expected to expand job creation.
Promotion of Organic Fertilizer
84. Mr. Speaker, the recent global crisis has severely disrupted inorganic fertilizer supply chains.
This has resulted in sharp increases in prices making it difficult for farmers to access the commodity and thus threatening food security.
85. The Ministry of Food and Agriculture is intensifying efforts to promote the local production and use of organic fertilizers.
Further to this, under the subsidy programme, the Ministry has increased the quota for organic fertilizer suppliers to cover the shortfall in supply of inorganic fertilisers.
86. Additionally, Government is facilitating the establishment and the expansion of local organic fertilizer production plants with support from the EXIM Bank.
African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA)
87. Mr. Speaker, we will pursue strategically, opportunities that ensure that we take full advantage of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) as part of efforts to pursue an export-led economic recovery.
The Ministry of Trade and Industry is working with over 200 Ghanaian companies to facilitate their entry into the African market including about 70 1D1F companies.
Additionally, the AfCFTA Guided Trade Initiative (GTI) has been launched to start commercially meaningful trade.
The products identified for the Initiative include batteries, tea, coffee, ceramic tiles, processed meat products, corn starch, sugar, and pasta, amongst others, in line with the AfCFTA focus on value chain development.
88. Mr. Speaker, the Ghana Export Promotion Authority will enhance its coordination role by facilitating support to key export-sector stakeholders. Export Trade Houses (ETHs) will be established in selected markets to promote made-in-Ghana products brands, including the completion of the first ETH in Kenya.
Additionally, opportunities will be created for local Ghanaian businessmen and investors to invest in export product transformation and value addition at the district level in partnership with the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development. Development Bank Ghana
89. Mr. Speaker, Government through the Development Bank Ghana (DBG) has established a GH¢500 million special credit programme: the DBG Emergency Economic Programme (DEEP) to support businesses in the agribusiness value chain over the next five years.
The priority sectors are Poultry, Rice & Cereals, Pharmaceutical manufacturing, Tourism, Textiles & Garments for investments to help build economic resilience.
90. Mr. Speaker, to support SMEs with equity funding, DBG is also in the process of establishing a private equity fund with an initial capitalization of about GH¢400m (US$30m).
DBG has fully on-boarded four Participating Financial Institutions (PFIs) and will engage other financial institutions to expand its loan channels.
A total of seven loans amounting to GH¢ 245,322,000.00 was disbursed to SME’s saving over 1,000 jobs.
DBG has partnered with a PFI to build a digital lending platform to shorten the processing time for lending to SMEs and increase its ability to reach a lot more businesses across the country.
Ghana Agricultural Insurance Pool (GAIP)
91. Mr. Speaker, the National Insurance Commission, is spearheading the development of agricultural insurance for farmers through the Ghana Agricultural Insurance Pool (GAIP).
GAIP provides traditional agricultural insurance and indexbased weather insurance products to commercial farmers and small-holder farmers.
An estimated USD$400 million in agricultural insurance will be extended to eligible farmers in 2023.
EXPANDING INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
92. Mr. Speaker, as part of effort to ensure power is affordable for industrial, commercial and residential use, Government has substantially completed a renegotiation and restructuring exercise of Power Purchase Agreements (“PPAs”) with 6 operational Independent Power Producers (“IPPs”), namely, Karpower, Cenpower, Early Power, Twin City Energy (formerly Amandi), AKSA Energy and CENIT Energy.
93. Government has also pursued cost-cutting and green initiatives, including conversion to a tolling model, refinancing of expensive debt, profiling of tariffs and switching power plants from imported liquid fuel to locally produced natural gas as primary fuel.
94. On connectivity to the national grid, a total of 157 communities were linked to the national grid as of September 2022.
The Ministry of Energy will further connect an additional 400 towns under the SHEP-4, SHEP-5 and Turnkey Projects in 2023.
The Coastal Fishing Ports And Landing Sites Redevelopment Project
95. Mr. Speaker, substantial progress has been made in the development of 12 coastal fish landing sites and 2 fishing ports along the coast of Ghana namely, Axim and Dixcove in the Western Region, Moree, Mfantsiman, Ekumfi, Mumford, Winneba, Senya Beraku, Gomoa Feteh and Elmina, in the Central Region, Teshie, Osu and James Town in the Greater Accra Regions and Keta in the Volta Region.
96. Mr. Speaker, overall, the project is about 95 percent complete and will ensure safe launching and landing of artisanal fishing canoes and promote hygienic environmental conditions. Climate Change
97. Mr. Speaker, global warming poses major threats to the economies of climate vulnerable countries like Ghana.
According to the Vulnerable Twenty (V20) Loss and Damage Report, Ghana lost US$15.20billion from 2000 to 2019 to climate change.
According to the World Bank Group’s new Country Climate and Development Report (CCDR) for Ghana, incomes could reduce by up to 40% for poor households by 2050, if urgent climate actions are not taken.
98. At COP27, the Government took the opportunity to leverage its bilateral engagements to expand consultations on debt-for-nature swaps as well as increased private sector investments to accelerate our transition to low carbon growth and finance our climate action measures.
99. Mr. Speaker, I can report that Ghana has assumed the Presidency (from 2022 to 2024) of the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) and Chair of the Vulnerable Twenty (V20) Group of Ministers of Finance.
Government will leverage this opportunity to accelerate our climate agenda which is outlined in Ghana’s Climate Prosperity Plans.
SOCIAL PROTECTION
100. Mr. Speaker, even amidst the current difficulties, we remain committed to implementing Ghana’s social protection programmes.
We will not renege on our responsibilities towards the vulnerable and socially excluded and the implementation of our various social protection programmes will be expanded.
Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP)
101. Mr. Speaker, the Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) Programme has since its inception in 2008, supported extremely poor and vulnerable households; increasing beneficiary coverage from 143,552 in 2015 to 344,389 households comprising 1,827,035 individuals as of September 2022.
102. Government is committed to expanding coverage to all 2,500,000 extreme poor individuals as estimated by the Ghana Living Standards Survey (GLSS 7) by 2024.
While improving efficiency through digitalisation and assessment, Government will, in 2023, increase the value of the LEAP grant from the average of GHC 41.75 per household to GH¢95.19 bi-monthly.
Ghana School Feeding Programme (GSFP)
103. Mr. Speaker, the Ghana School Feeding Programme (GSFP) which provides one hot nutritious meal each day for 3,448,065 beneficiary pupils in public basic schools as of December, 2021 will be sustained.
104. In 2023, the feeding grant will be increased to reflect the current cost of living.
The programme will also strengthen domestic production by sourcing locally produced food from the National Buffer Stock company.
Capitation Grant
105. Mr. Speaker, the Government abolished the charging and payments of all forms of fees/levies in all public basic schools and replaced them with the capitation grant in 2005.
This has contributed to steady increases in enrollment over the years.
106. Mr. Speaker, Government will continue to strengthen monitoring to address teething challenges in the implementation of the policy which include; timely release of the grant, misuse of funds, transparency and poor book keeping and value of grant amount.
EXPANDING INFRASTRUCTURE
107. Mr. Speaker, in fulfillment of Government’s commitment to improve road infrastructure, the Ministry of Roads and Highways continued its Nationwide Road and Bridge Construction Programme.
108. Works on the La Beach Road Project and the construction of a 3-tier interchange at Nungua Barrier are progressing steadily.
Works on the interchange currently stand at 62 percent.
Construction of the Kumasi Lake Roads and Drainage Extension project is almost complete and stands at 97 per cent.
109. Work is ongoing on the 17.85 km Ofankor Nsawam dual carriage road which is scheduled to be completed in May 2024 110.
Mr. Speaker, dualisation on the Tema – Aflao and the Tema – Akosombo roads has commenced. Works are ongoing on the rehabilitation of Assin Fosu – Assin Praso road including the dualisation of 1.2km of Assin Fosu township roads into a 4-lane carriageway is at 53 percent.
Additionally, works on the reconstruction of Bechem – Techimantia – Akomadan and Agona Nkwanta – Tarkwa roads are at 21 percent and 7 percent completion, respectively.
111. Works on Phase II of the Obetsebi Lamptey Circle Interchange and ancillary work is at 71 percent completion.
Additionally, construction of the Flyover over the Accra-Tema Motorway from the Flower Pot roundabout is 56 percent complete.
112. Mr. Speaker, to improve connectivity within areas cut off by waterways, work on the construction of 50No. prefabricated bridges continued in 2022.
Progress of the new bridge being constructed over River Pra to separate vehicular traffic from the rail along the Twifo Praso-Dunkwa road is at 87 percent completion. 113. Mr. Speaker, the Critical Regional and Inter-Regional Road Projects initiated in 2019 are at various stages of completion. Completed projects include:
● Upgrading of Golokwati-Wli Road;
● Upgrading of Nsuta – Beposo, Lot 3;
● Rehabilitation of Nkonya Wrumpong – Kwamikrom;
● Partial Reconstruction of Bawjiase – Adeiso; and
● Resealing of Tamale – Salaga Road – Lot.
114. Progress on the following roads, among other have achieved significant progress:
● Upgrading of Navrongo – Naga Road
● Upgrading of Wa-Bulenga-Yaala Road
● Upgrading of Salaga – Ekumdipe – Kpandai Road
● Kpandai – Nkanchina Road (10.8km)
● Rehabilitation of Atebubu – Kwame Danso Roads
● Upgrading of Anwiankwanta – Obuasi Road
● Rehabilitation Of New Abirem – Ofoasekuma Road
● Upgrading of Sefwi Wiawso – Akontombra Road
● Upgrading of Akrodie – Sayereso Road
● Rehabilitation of selected roads in Greater Accra.
115. Mr. Speaker, contract works under the Master Project Support Agreement (MPSA) with Sinohydro Corporation Limited are stages of completion:
● Tamale Interchange Project (100%)
● Western Region and Cape Coast Inner City Roads (100%)
● Upgrading of Selected Feeder Roads in Ashanti and Western Regions (100%)
● Construction of Hohoe-Jasikan–Dodi-Pepesu (100%)
116. Mr. Speaker, in 2023, a number of pipeline projects which are at various stages of preparation will be pursued.
These include:
● Construction of Accra – Kumasi Road: Anyinam Bypass;
● Construction of Accra – Kumasi Road: Konongo Bypass;
● Construction of Adidome – Asikuma Junction and Asutsuare – Aveyime including 2No. interchanges at Dufor Adidome and Asikuma Junction;
● Kasoa – Cape Coast Dualisation;
● Dualization of Sekondi and Adiembra Roads;
● Takoradi -Agona-Nkwanta- Apemanim
● Construction of Bridge over the Volta River at Volivo;
● Buipe, Yapei and Daboya Bridges;
● Adawso-Ekyi Amanfrom Bridge; and
● Dikpe, Iture and Ankobra Bridges. Road Financing 117. Mr. Speaker, Government is pursuing the strategic decision to procure the 27.7km of the Accra-Tema Motorway and Extensions Project through the Ghana Infrastructure Investment Fund (GIIF).
A PPP Concession Agreement backed by an appropriate toll arrangement will be presented to Parliament for approval to facilitate its execution.
Provision has also been made in the 2023 and the Medium-Term Budget for the Equity and Viability Gap Funding required by a GIIF Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) to enable the project to start in earnest in 2023.
The project will be delivered in phases.
118. Mr. Speaker, the iconic nature of the project is such that when completed, there will be five lanes each on both sides of the main Accra-Tema Motorway stretch, 33 and six lanes each on the Tetteh Quarshie-Apenkwa stretch of the road.
The project will include the remodeling of Tetteh Quarshie Interchange, the reconstruction of the Apenkwa Interchange and the construction of new interchanges at the Fiesta Royale cross roads and Neoplan area.
Debt Exchange Programme
119. Mr. Speaker, the Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA) based on the macroeconomic outlook has been conducted by the Ministry of Finance. It analyzes the country’s capacity to finance its policy objectives and service its debts.
It covers public, publicly guaranteed debt of central government and partial non-guaranteed debt of SOEs.
120. The sustainability of our debt has been continuously affected by the negative impact of exchange rate depreciation, particularly on external debt, as well as the crystallization of significant contingent liabilities in recent years.
The current debt sustainability analysis conducted reveals that Ghana is now considered to be in high risk of debt distress.
121. Mr. Speaker, despite the heightened debt levels, Government remains committed to ensuring that debt is brought to sustainable levels over the medium to long-term.
To this end, we will implement a debt exchange programme to address the challenges identified in the portfolio in collaboration with all relevant stakeholders including the Ghanaian public, investor community and development partners.
122. Furthermore, Government will continue to strengthen its oversight of all SoEs, in particular, financial and energy sectors.
The reforms and discipline at the SoEs will reduce potential fiscal risks from incidence of contingent liabilities.
123. Preferred financing option for projects.
We, however, recognize that there may be cases where non-concessional borrowing may be required to finance critical transformative projects.
Such financing will be determined within limits that are consistent with our debt sustainability programme.
124. We will inform this House, at the Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review, of projects that will be financed within our non-concessional borrowing limits.
Accordingly, we will not publish any list of projects to be financed from external non-concessional loans in this budget, previously titled ‘Appendix 10C’. Implementation of the Cabinet directives on expenditure measures
125. Mr. Speaker, as a first step toward expenditure rationalisation, Government has approved the following directives which takes effect from January, 2023:
● All MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs are directed to reduce fuel allocations to Political Appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs by 50%.
This directive applies to all methods of fuel allocation including coupons, electronic cards, chit system, and fuel depots. Accordingly, 50% of the previous years (2022) budget allocation for fuel shall be earmarked for official business pertaining to MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs;
● A ban on the use of V8s/V6s or its equivalent except for cross country travel.
All government vehicles would be registered with GV green number plates from January 2023;
● Limited budgetary allocation for the purchase of vehicles. For the avoidance of doubt, purchase of new vehicles shall be restricted to locally assembled vehicles;
● Only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be allowed.
No official foreign travel shall be allowed for board members.
Accordingly, all government institutions should submit a travel plan for the year 2023 by mid-December of all expected travels to the Chief of Staff; 2023 BUDGET STATEMENT 35
● As far as possible, meetings and workshops should be done within the official environment or government facilities;
● Government sponsored external training and Staff Development activities at the Office of the President, Ministries and SOEs must be put on hold for the 2023 financial year;
● Reduction of expenditure on appointments including salary freezes together with suspension of certain allowances like housing, utilities and clothing, etc.;
● A freeze on new tax waivers for foreign companies and review of tax exemptions for free zone, mining, oil and gas companies;
● A hiring freeze for civil and public servants
● No new government agencies shall be established in 2023;
● There shall be no hampers for 2022;
● There shall be no printing of diaries, notepads, calendars and other promotional merchandise by MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs for 2024;
● All non-critical project must be suspended for 2023 Financial year
CONCLUSION
126. Mr. Speaker, Government cares deeply about our people, and is very much concerned about their current plight and the future of our country.
The 2023 Budget has been prepared with high consideration for the aspirations of Ghanaians and the brighter prospects of our economy to transition into Upper Middle Income within a decade.
It reflects our determination and resolve to confront the current daunting economic challenges facing our nation head-on and reset the economy.
127. In the immediate term, we will work towards securing an agreement with the International Monetary Fund, execute the debt exchange programme, improve the management of foreign exchange, and support our local productive capacity for food security. We are confident that the measures outlined in this 2023 Budget will redirect us on the path of macroeconomic stability and growth.
128. Mr. Speaker, the mission ahead is for the determined and not the pessimist. We acknowledge that our people have been severely impacted by the current economic challenges. As a responsive Government, we have acted swiftly and boldly by developing the PC-PEG and will work with local and international partners to implement it.
129. Mr. Speaker, the 2023 Budget, will focus on Government’s resolve to structurally transform the economy. We plan to:
● Aggressively mobilise domestic revenue;
● Boost local productive capacity;
● Promote a diversified and vibrant value-added export sector;
● Streamline expenditures;
● Protect the poor and vulnerable;
● Expand digital and physical infrastructure; and
● Implement structural and public sector reforms. 130. We will continue the implementation of key interventions like the YouStart, Economic Enclaves, 1D1F, and Tech Hubs with the limited resources that we have complemented with the support from Development Bank Ghana.
131. Specifically, on the YouStart, we intend to support 30,000 youth and under the Economic Enclaves, we intend to develop 110,000 acres of land for rice maize, soya bean as well as poultry. Funding will be sought from the GHc500 million DBG fund and GoG sources. We will also be aligning support from our development partners to boost growth in the real-sector, focusing mainly on agriculture, entrepreneurship and value addition.
132. Mr. Speaker, as I have indicated it has become even more urgent to mobilise domestic revenue especially in times like this when our access to the international capital market is largely closed. We urgently need to restore debt sustainability, macroeconomic stability and grow the economy. As a responsible Government, we will take the hard, unpopular, but necessary decisions to build back better and emerge stronger.
133. Mr. Speaker, post-COVID, we identified the need to ramp-up our domestic revenue mobilisation efforts to match the performance of our peers and finance our development agenda. Last year, we started with the E-Levy which has not yielded the resources as expected.
134. Mr. Speaker, we know that we have to:
● Keep the lights on at the cost of US$1billion annually;
● keep the hospitals running and ensure that the over 15.5m Ghanaians on NHIS are properly catered for;
● Keep our schools running and pay the over 300,000 teachers every month;
● Keep our hospitals running and pay the over 119,000 nurses every month;
● Keep the law courts open and ensure timely access to justice; and
● Keep the local assemblies working to deliver essential social services to our people.
135. Mr. Speaker, it has also become clear that we cannot take the territorial integrity and internal cohesion of our country for granted. In the last couple of years, we have invested significantly in retooling the security sector to maintain territorial integrity and improve internal security (we have procured CCTV cameras, motor bicycles, vehicles,
Forward Operating Bases, and recruitment of security personnel among other interventions). We can all attest that police visibility has increased tremendously.
136. Mr. Speaker, our ability to continue to deliver all these critical public services will require significant resources and we believe that together we can raise the necessary revenues to implement them.
137. Mr. Speaker, the demand for roads has become the cry of many communities in the country. Unfortunately, with the current economic difficulties and the absence of dedicated source of funding for road construction, it is difficult to meet these demands.
In that regard we are proposing the implementation of new revenue measures. The major one is an increase in the VAT rate by 2.5 percentage points.
138. This increase is expected to yield GHc2.70 billion which will be used to augment funding for our road infrastructure development. This will be complemented by a major compliance programme to ensure that we derive the maximum yields from existing revenue handles.
139. Mr. Speaker, in this Budget, we have highlighted the need for robust public sector reforms to complement the existing public financial management regime.
Here, the focus is to introduce private sector participation in the retail sub-sector of the Energy Sector to reduce system losses and improve delivery of service for Ghanaians.
140. Mr. Speaker, this afternoon, the senior National Team, the Black Stars, will be representing our nation for the fourth time at the Football World Cup in Qatar.
Let us continue to bear them in prayers and offer our support. Working together after missing the last tournament, we have risen again and taken our place on the world stage.
141. Mr. Speaker, we must be inspired by the re-emergence of the Black Stars on the world stage. We must work together to ensure that our economy rises again to the comfort of our people.
This Budget offers us a better opportunity to jointly work towards rebuilding the economy and rediscovering our providential way towards our manifest destiny.
142. Together let us arise!
143. Mr. Speaker, let us not squander the opportunity to turnaround, and reset our economy and create a bright medium-term for our country and its people. This is the time to rebuild, not to destroy and tear down. Let us work together for our collective benefit as is said in Nehemiah 2:18, with unity of purpose, service to the Republic, and the abiding grace of God.
144. Mr. Speaker, I repeat, Mr. Speaker, N) fiaa n) baa hi!! 145. Mr. Speaker, let us go forward, believing in the assurance of the Psalmist that “For the sake of the house of the LORD our God, I will seek your prosperity”. 146. Mr. Speaker, I present to you the ‘NKABOM’ Budget.
In an effort to increase economic growth and restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability, the government has launched a strategy to urgently mobilize domestic resources.
“Mr. Speaker, following COVID, we realized that we needed to step up our efforts to raise domestic revenue in order to keep up with our peers’ performance and fund our development goal.
We began with the E-Levy last year, but it did not produce the expected results in terms of funding, he said.
This, he explained is expected to see the country mobilise an amount of GH¢143,95 billion as revenues in the year under review.
The measures include an increase of the Value Added Tax (VAT) rate by 2.5 percent which is expected to yield GH¢2.7 billion which would be used to augment funding for road infrastructure development.
Mr Ofori-Atta said this would be complemented by a major compliance programme to ensure that the country derives the maximum yields from existing revenue handles.
He said the government also intends to fast-track the implementation of the Unified Property Rate Platform programme in 2023; and also review the E-Levy Act and more specifically, reduce the headline rate from 1.5 percent to one percent (1%) of the transaction value as well as the removal of the daily threshold.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta however said the goal of government was to significantly enhance revenues, significantly cut down the cost of running government, significantly expand local production, invest more to protect the poor and vulnerable, and continue expanding access to good roads, education and health for every Ghanaian everywhere in Ghana and the diaspora.
The contentious Electronic Transfer Levy will drop from 1.5 percent to 1 percent in Ghana.
But the GHS 100 daily barrier intended to protect vulnerable individuals will be eliminated as part of the e-levy legislation revision.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta made this announcement during the 2023 budget reading in parliament on Thursday (November 24) adding that this review was part of a “seven-point agenda aimed at restoring macroeconomic stability and accelerating our economic transformation.”
The minister admitted that the levy which was introduced in the 2022 budget “has not yielded the resources as expected.” The introduction of the electronic levy was to help the government mobilise domestic revenue.
Mr. Ofori-Atta also noted that the government received several proposals for a review of the E-Levy “and is working closely with all stakeholders to evaluate the impact of the Levy.”
He said these could include the revision of the various exclusions.
“As a first step, however, the headline rate will be reduced to one percent of the transaction value alongside the removal of the daily threshold,” Mr. Ofori-Atta stated.
The government reduced expectations for revenue collection from the levy after an initial projection of GHS 7 billion.
In July 2022, projections were reduced by about ten-fold to GHS 611 million.
The levy faced stiff opposition from the Minority in Parliament and was generally unpopular with Ghanaians.
An Afro-Barometer survey showed that three-fourths of Ghanaians disapproved of the e-levy, including 67 percent who “strongly disapproved” of it, local media house, citinewsroom reported.
This review is the second for the levy, after initially being pegged at 1.75 percent before the government reduced it in a compromise amid protests against it.
He claims that the pressures on the local currency and the rising cost of food justified the GhanaCARES Program’s current focus on enhancing the private sector’s export and productive capability.
He said that an economic enclave project was being pursued to this end, with the goal of supporting the cultivation of up to 110,000 acres of land in the Greater Accra, Ashanti, Central, Savannah, and Oti Regions.
Presenting the 2023 budget before parliament, Ken Ofori-Atta said the initiative seeks to expand production and productivity of rice, tomato, maize, vegetables and poultry and added that the move is being led and coordinated by the Millennium Development Authority (MiDA) in collaboration with other government institutions.
“Mr. Speaker, consistent with the private sector-led approach, the programme will engage interested private sector actors to expand and agricultural production and processing in the Asutuare-Tsopoli Economic Enclave area based on a Partnership Framework.
“The same approach will be adopted for the lands secured in the Ashanti, Central, Savannah and Oti regions,” he stated.
“It is envisaged that the imports of paper will be replaced, and more jobs created,” he said.
In addition to the Enclave Project, he said the GhanaCARES programme in 2023 would continue to offer catalytic support in some targeted areas.
To this end, he said the programme would work with DBG to provide funding to interested and targeted farmers, support MoFA to adopt and deploy the farmer registration database for the farmer input subsidy programme to enhance efficiency; and support the Ministry of Communication and Digitalisation (MoCD) to establish a tech hub to improve knowledge in Technology and innovation by the youth, in collaboration with the University of Ghana.
The Finance Minister said the GhanaCARES programme would also ensure the operationalisation of the Foundry under a sustainable private sector management framework; and provide interest rate subsidies and direct financing; including supporting prioritised sectors in the rural economy through the ARB Apex Bank and its network of banks as agreed under the AfDB-supported Post-COVID Skills and Productivity Enhancement Project.
The government has frozen the hiring of public and civil servants for the 2023 financial year.
According to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, this is part of expenditure cut measures being adopted by government to address the current economic challenges.
“A hiring freeze for civil and public servants. No new government agencies shall be established in 2023,” Ken Ofori-Atta said.
Ken Ofori-Atta made this known while presenting the 2023 budget before parliament on Thursday, November 24, 2022.
The presentation of the budget in parliament is in pursuance of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
This allows the Finance Minister to review the budget statement and economic policy of the government and supplementary estimates for the 2023 financial year.
On November 24, 2022, he announced it while presenting the budget for 2023.
Mr. Speaker, despite the elevated levels of debt, the government is still committed to making sure that debt is reduced to levels that are manageable in the medium to long term.
“To this end, we will implement a debt exchange programme to address the challenges identified in the portfolio in collaboration with all relevant stakeholders including the Ghanaian public, the investor community, and development partners,” he said.
The presentation is in accordance with Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution and section 21 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
The minister is presenting the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy to parliament in a year that has experienced perhaps, the worst forms of economic downturns in the fourth republic.
Ken Ofori-Atta has also come under a lot of backlash and pressure from both within and outside his party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), to either resign or be sacked by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
Government has announced a 50% cut in fuel allocations to all Political Appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs by 50%. This, according to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, forms part of measures “toward expenditure rationalisation.”
Addressing Parliament while presenting the 2023 budget statement and economy policy on November 24, 2022, the Minister announced that the directive takes effect from January 2023.
“Mr. Speaker, as a first step toward expenditure rationalisation, Government has approved the following directives which takes effect from January, 2023:All MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs are directed to reduce fuel allocations to Political Appointees and heads of MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs by 50%.
“This directive applies to all methods of fuel allocation including coupons, electronic cards, chit system, and fuel depots. Accordingly, 50% of the previous years (2022) budget allocation for fuel shall be earmarked for official business pertaining to MDAs, MMDAs and SOEs,” he said.
Additionally, measures toward expenditure rationalisation include a ban on the use of V8s and V6s by government officials (except for across country travels).
Government has also announced a limited budgetary allocation for the purchase of vehicles. “For the avoidance of doubt, purchase of new vehicles shall be restricted to locally assembled vehicles,” the Minister said.
“Only essential official foreign travel across government including SOEs shall be allowed,” he added.
These directives comes at a time when the country has been plunged into an economic crisis. Amidst the crisis, there have been calls on the government to cut down on its expenditure. An Associate Professor of Political Science and a former Director of the Centre for European Studies of the University of Ghana, Prof Ransford Gyampo was one of the active voices championing this course.
In line with the calls, government initially announced a 30% slash in the salaries of some of its appointees. Subsequently, it has announced the 50% slash in fuel allocations to all political appointees.
Meanwhile, the prices of goods and services continue to soar. Inflation currently stands at 40.4 % and the fuel prices continue to surge, making life unbearable for the ordinary Ghanaian. Nonetheless, government is confident that the measures outlined in the 2023 Budget will “redirect us on the path of macroeconomic stability and growth.”
On November 24, 2022, he announced it while delivering the 2023 budget.
Mr. Speaker, despite the elevated debt levels, the government is still committed to making sure that debt is reduced to manageable levels in the medium to long term, he said.
“To this end, we will implement a debt exchange programme to address the challenges identified in the portfolio in collaboration with all relevant stakeholders including the Ghanaian public, the investor community, and development partners,” he said.
The Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, is in parliament to fulfill his constitutional mandate by presenting the government budget to the House.
The minister is presenting the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy to parliament in a year that has experienced perhaps, the worst forms of economic downturns in the fourth republic.
Ken Ofori-Atta has also come under a lot of backlash and pressure from both within and outside his party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), to either resign or be sacked by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
He claims that the government has also given recipients of the scheme GH1.98 million in support.
When Ken Ofori-Atta delivered the 2023 budget statement to the House of Representatives, he noted that the money was given to SMEs in the poultry, agro-processing, ICT, textiles, and food processing industries that were led by young people (under the age of 40).
“Mr Speaker, a launch for the District Entrepreneurship Programme (DEP) component of the programme was held on 14th November, 2022 and it is expected that the launch of the Commercial component of the Programme will occur by the end of 2022 to enable qualified beneficiaries access support,” he stated.
One District One Factory (1D1F).
To date, he said a total of 296 1D1F projects were at various stages of implementation, out of which 126 were currently operational, 143 were under construction, and 27 were pipeline projects.
He added that government would in 2023 intensify support to existing and new manufacturing enterprises with technical assistance, credit facilitation, and access to electricity and other infrastructure.
The Minority Leader in Parliament, Haruna Iddrisu, has described the 2022 Budget Statement and Economic Policy as a Ɛka mpɛ dede budget.
The Akan phrase, teased from the popular ‘sika mpɛ dede’ that was used by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo during his last address to the nation, literally means that ‘debt does not like noise.’
Getting up to second the motion on the floor of parliament for the adjournment of sitting after the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, presented the budget, the Minority Leader called out the minister for excessive borrowing.
He explained that, with the details of the budget as presented by the minister, and with his own admission that the country is highly-indebted, then the phrase Ɛka mpɛ dede best describes the budget.
“We have heard the honourable Minister of Finance, before this august House, declare Ghana a high-risk, distress debt country. So, Mr. Speaker, this budget is Ɛka mpɛ dede budget and therefore, he’s put the country on the path to debt restructuring, which he has announced as debt exchange program.
“So, Mr. Speaker, this budget is Ɛka mpɛ dede budget because he has announced debt restructuring in the name of a debt exchange program,” he said.
Haruna Iddrisu also appealed to the minister to ensure that he regularizes the government’s borrowing spree.
“Mr. Speaker, my greatest expectation of the minister is to regularize the borrowing under the amended Bank of Ghana act of 2016.
“You have to come back to this House to seek our mandate and authorization for your excessive borrowing from the Bank of Ghana, that needs to be regularized,” he said.
The Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, presented the ‘Nkabom’ budget to parliament as part of his constitutional mandate on Thursday, November 24, 2022.
He asserts that the implementation of the 2.5% rise in the value-added tax will result in a further increase in the price of products and services.
Ato Forson spoke with the media after presenting the 2023 budget “The people of Ghana will continue to experience agonising sufferings as a result of increased taxes.
Unfortunately, the Minister’s announcement of spending reductions did not outline their intended method.”
“The things he outlined there are nothing but empty. What we can see is that the government is shifting the adjustment programme to the ordinary Ghanaian where the taxpayer will be made to pay more,” he said.
Government has announced an increment in Value Added Tax (VAT) by 2.5 percent for consumers of goods and services.
“Mr. Speaker, we will undertake the following actions, initiatives, and interventions under the seven-point agenda. To aggressively mobilize domestic revenue, we will among others: Increase the VAT rate by 2.5 percent to directly support our roads and digitalization agenda; Fast-track the implementation of the Unified Property Rate Platform programme in 2023; and Review the E-Levy Act and more specifically, reduce the headline rate from 1.5% to one percent (1%) of the transaction value as well as the removal of the daily threshold,” he said.
The Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, made this known in parliament when he delivered the 2023 budget before lawmakers on Thursday, November 24, 2022.
According to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, the government will spend GH50 million through the Development Bank Ghana (DBG) in the agriculture sector as part of a larger strategy to revive the Ghanaian economy and return it to its pre-COVID-19 levels.
“Mr. Speaker, the government has established the DBG Emergency Economic Programme (DEEP), a GH500 million special credit program, to support companies in the agriculture value chain over the next five years.
Poultry, rice and cereals, pharmaceutical manufacture, tourism, textiles and apparel, and rice and cereals are the priority sectors for investments to assist strengthen economic resilience, he said.
He made this known when he addressed Parliament on Thursday, November 24, 2022, during his presentation of the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy.
The contribution of the agricultural sector to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has increased from an average of 2.8 per cent over the four-year period ending 2016 to a four-year average of 5.8 per cent in 2020.
Last year, the sector contributed 8.4 per cent to the value of goods and services produced within the country.
This the Minister explained that the sector is the backbone of the Ghanaian economy hence, it is only prudent government channels enough resources towards it.
He said government over the years has chalked so many successes within the sector notably through the introduction of flagship programmes such as the Planting for Food and Jobs (PFJ) and the Rearing for Food and Jobs (RFJ) and will continue to roll out more interventions in the sector to boost food production and create jobs for the youth who want to venture into agriculture.
He called on farmers to take advantage of the intervention to make decent incomes from farming and improve their standard of living.
This was announced by the Finance Minster, Ken Ofori-Atta, during the 2023 budget statement read in Parliament on Thursday, November 24, 2022.
The e-levywas formerly at a rate of 1.75% during its proposal stage. It was however, reduced to 1.5% when passed into law.
The GH100 daily threshold, which has been in effect since the tax measure’s adoption in May of this year, will also be eliminated, Mr Ofori-Atta continued.
“Mr. Speaker, we will undertake the following actions, initiatives, and interventions under the seven-point agenda. To aggressively mobilize domestic revenue, we will among others: Increase the VAT rate by 2.5 percent to directly support our roads and digitalization agenda; Fast-track the implementation of the Unified Property Rate Platform programme in 2023; and Review the E-Levy Act and more specifically, reduce the headline rate from 1.5% to one percent (1%) of the transaction value as well as the removal of the daily threshold,” he said.
The implementation of the e-levy commenced in May 2022. Since its presence, government has been unable to rake in the expected revenue due to opposition from some members of the public.
To remedy this challenge, experts called on the government to reduce the rate.
The presentation of the budget is in accordance with Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution and section 21 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
The “Nkabom budget” has been delivered in a year that has experienced what can be called the worst economic downturns in the fourth republic.
In his testimony before the legislature on November 24, 2022, he stated that Ghana imports a variety of goods, including fruit juices, toilet paper, toothpicks, fish, chicken, fish oil, rice, fish, and fertilizer.
According to Ken Ofori-Atta, Ghana’s strong reliance on imports puts pressure on the cedi, making it vulnerable to other major trading currencies.
” Mr. Speaker, as I have already indicated, Ghana’s heavy dependence on imports places tremendous pressure on the Cedi, creating an unfavourable balance of payments position. On average, Ghana’s import bill exceeds US$10 billion annually and is accounted for by a diverse range of items that include iron, steel, aluminium, sugar, rice, fish, poultry, palm oil, cement, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, Toilet roll, toothpick, fruit juices, etc,” he said.
According to him, Ghana has the capacity to locally produce the aforementioned items that account for about 45 percent of the value of the country’s annual imports.
He said government will support the price sector through partnerships with existing and prospective businesses to expand, rehabilitate and establish manufacturing plants targeted at producing these selected items.
He explained the increase as the result of the local currency’s decline versus the main trading currencies at the beginning of this year.
He added that the cedi’s depreciation has had a serious impact on how the Finance Ministry manages economic matters.
“For us at the Ministry of Finance, the depreciation of the cedi seriously affects our ability to effectively manage our debt. Indeed, our stock of debt has increased by GH¢93 billion this year alone due to the depreciation of the cedi at the beginning of 2022,” the Finance Minister said.
The presentation of the budget in parliament is in pursuance of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
This allows the Finance Minister to review the budget statement and economic policy of the government and supplementary estimates for the 2023 financial year.
Ken Ofori-Atta has also come under a lot of backlash and pressure from both within and outside his party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), to either resign or be sacked by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
According to him, the development has resulted in credit downgrades, rising cost of living and inabillity to access international capital markets for borrowing, among others.
The Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, is in parliament to fulfil his constitutional mandate by presenting the government budget to the House.
The presentation is in accordance with Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution and section 21 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921).
Ken Ofori-Atta has also come under a lot of backlash and pressure from both within and outside his party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), to either resign or be sacked by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
Members of the Majority caucus in parliament have been asked to give high regard to communication channels within the caucus in putting out their grievances.
The directive issued by the leadership of the New Patriotic Party to its MPs, who form the majority caucus in parliament, is on the back of their demand for the removal of the Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta.
The party, in a statement co-signed by Majority Chief Whip Frank Annoh-Dompreh and General Secretary of the NPP, Justin Kodua Frimpong said “In the meantime, the leadership of the Parliamentary Group and the leadership of the party counselled the Honourbale Members of Parliamentary party to respect to the caucus communications channel, and to the largest extent possible, work together as one caucus unit.
“Leadership of the party in this regard call upon the Members of Parliament to attend to all Government Business in the House including in particular the 2023 budget statement and economic policy and all connected matters.”
The leadership of NPP had to hold a crunch meeting with members of the majority ahead of the presentation of the 2023 budget by the finance minister.
This was after some of the majority MPs decided to go back on their calls for the removal of the minister amidst threats to boycott the budget presentation if he is allowed to appear before parliament on Thursday, September 24, 2022.
However, the MPs have been compelled to hold off on their call for the minister’s dismissal after the meeting with the party’s leadership.
The party has also instructed the MPs to ensure their presence and participation in proceedings when the minister presents the budget.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta presented the 2023 Annual Budget Statement and Economic Policy of Government to Parliament today.
This is being carried out by the Finance Minister on behalf of the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in accordance with Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution and section 21 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921)
The budget according to the Ministry of Finance will focus on government’s strategies to restore and stabilize the macro economy, build resilience and promote inclusive growth and value creation.
The Ministry also said it will feature updates on Ghana’s engagement with the IMF for an IMF-supported Programme; year-to-date macro-fiscal performance of the economy; the YouStart initiative under the Ghana CARES Programme; climate action strategies; fiscal measures and debt management strategies to ensure fiscal and debt sustainability and promote growth.
The Minority in Parliament has said it will resist any policy in the 2023 budget it feels are “draconian”.
In a statement, it reiterated the need for “drastic cuts in non-essential Government expenditures and more prudent use of scarce national resources.”
“We have also demanded greater transparency and accountability in public financial management,” the statement added.
The Minority said it expects its proposals to “find expression in the budget and signal a change in course by the failed Akufo-Addo/Bawumia Government.”
“We wish to assure the Ghanaian people that we stand with them in these difficult times, and we will not relent in our efforts to hold the managers of the economy to account,” the statement added.
The Minority also allayed fears that it could boycott the budget because of protests against the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta.
Both sides of the Parliament have called for the Finance Minister to be removed amid Ghana’s economic crisis.
The budget comes as the government tries to secure a deal from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for economic support.
The Finance Ministry has said the 2023 Budget will focus on Government’s strategies to restore and stabilize the macroeconomy, build resilience, and promote inclusive growth and value creation.
The ministry also said it will feature updates on Ghana’s engagement with the IMF for an IMF-supported Programme; year-to-date macro-fiscal performance of the economy; the YouStart initiative under the Ghana CARES Programme; climate action strategies; fiscal measures and debt management strategies to ensure fiscal and debt sustainability and promote growth.
Under fire Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta will today, November 24, 2022, present the government’s 2023 Annual Budget Statement and Economic Policy to Parliament.
This is a constitutional exercise to be carried out by the Finance Minister on behalf of the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
“In accordance with Article 179 of the 1992 Constitution and section 21 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921) the Minister for Finance will, on behalf of the President, lay before Parliament the 2023 Annual Budget Statement and Economic Policy of Government on Thursday, 24th November 2022,” a statement from the Finance Ministry announced.
The budget according to the Ministry of Finance will focus on government’s strategies to restore and stabilize the macro economy, build resilience and promote inclusive growth and value creation.
The Ministry also said it will feature updates on Ghana’s engagement with the IMF for an IMF-supported Programme; year-to-date macro-fiscal performance of the economy; the YouStart initiative under the Ghana CARES Programme; climate action strategies; fiscal measures and debt management strategies to ensure fiscal and debt sustainability and promote growth.
Mr. Ofori -Atta’s continued clinging to the Finance Ministry has sparked massive disaffection in recent times, with some 95 New Patriotic Party Members of Parliament asking for his dismissal.
He is currently also going through a vote of censure probe by an 8-member ad-hoc Committee probing some 7 alleged financial malfeasance against him.
The Minority Caucus has also accused him of financial dishonesty and pitched him against a missing $100 million crude oil revenue, which has been corroborated by the Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC).
Following threats by some Majority MPs to boycott the budget reading, the leadership of the New Patriotic Party subsequently stepped in to resolve the impasse.
Ghana is currently seeking a $3 billion bailout package from the International Monetary Fund due to the current economic crisis. Negotiations are yet to be concluded.
Dr. Richard Amoako Baah, a Political Science Lecturer at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), has indicated that the majority of New Patriotic Party (NPP) Parliamentarians have lost their credibility.
His accusation relates to a recent U-turn on the part of the lawmakers who had on two occasions in the last month demanded the immediate dismissal of Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta over economic hardship.
Speaking to Accra-based Joy FM, the lecturer questioned why the MPs did not rescind their decision earlier and wondered further why the party executives did not approach the MPs early on when they decided to boycott the 2023 Budget reading should the Finance Minister present it.
“What is it that made them disagree before and how did they come back to this decision? They have brought party politics into the government … If you were going to change your mind, then you should do this earlier and why didn’t the party elders talk to them at an earlier time instead of this last minute?” Dr. Amoako Baah asked.
He noted that the latest decision taken by the anti-Ofori-Atta NPP MPs has also destroyed the credibility of the party.
“They [NPP MPs] have destroyed NPP’s credibility, they have separated the supporters, grassroots people of the party from themselves. Now it is very difficult for people to even see anything they say possible,” he observed.
Dr. Amoako Baah’s sentiment comes after some 98 NPP MPs rescinded their decision to boycott the 2023 budget presentation.
GhanaWeb earlier gathered that the finance minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, risked meeting an empty Parliament when he appears before the House to present the budget.
According to our sources, both Caucuses were likely to be absent themselves, which would have made it impossible for the minister to present the budget because there will be a lack of quorum as required by the Constitution.
The MPs made this U-turn after meeting with the national leadership of the party, who urged them to hold off on their demand until the 2023 Budget statement was read and appropriated.
But Dr. Amoako Baah is of the view that the Parliamentarian’s action is not a good thing.
He explained that this is because the MPs represent the party more than the executives and therefore could have maintained their stance.
The economy has suffered significantly since early 2022, plunging the country into a full-blown economic recession.
Attributing factors contributing to the economic slowdown, the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, asserted that the payment of energy sector excess capacity added to the country’s debt stocks.
Mr Ofori-Atta indicated that the Akufo-Addo government spends $500 million annually to settle energy sector debt created by the previous government.
According to the Finance Minister, “it is important at this point to also highlight that a key component of the national debt stock relates to three exceptional expenditure items that are neither external nor a creation of this government.”
“Energy Sector Excess Capacity Payments (17 billion), which relate to a legacy of take or pay contracts that saddled the country’s economy with annual excess capacity charges of close to $1 billion; direct COVID-19 expenditure amounted to 12.0 billion, and the banking sector clean-up (25 billion),” he added.
The aforementioned event, he said, contributed to about 23% of our annual debt servicing cost.
Mr Ofori-Atta made this revelation when he appeared before Parliament’s Ad hoc Committee to defend himself from some allegations levelled against him by the minority caucus in Parliament.
The Minority caucusCaucus, wanting the Finance Minister sacked from his post, accused him of reckless management of the economy.
Among other things, the Minority group cited the energy debt as an example of the recklessness and mismanagement of the minister.
Debunking the allegation, Mr Ofori-Atta pointed out that a lot of the energy sector debt burden is a result of contracts signed by former President Mahama’s administration between 2013 and 2016.
He mentioned that Mr Mahama during the power fluctuation popularly known as ‘dumsor’ signed a contract with several independent power production companies, prominent ones being KARPOWER and AMERI.
These power production companies supplied government with more than what it needed.
He disclosed that Ghana uses 2,700MW out of more than 5,000MW in installed capacity, thus, blaming him for energy debt, was far-fetched.
“So, Co-Chairs, I find it curious that Hon. Ato Forson will choose to cite energy bills as an example of the recklessness that the Minority charges me with and seek my removal by censure, especially when we have had to pay around $500 million dollars a year in excess capacity charges, for power the previous administration negotiated that we do not need and we do not use”,
He further explained that “in actual fact, we have been able to renegotiate some of these power purchase agreements and the new agreements with the Priority IPPs, once finalised and executed will offer estimated nominal savings of more than USD 4 billion over the next 5 years”.
Approximately 98 members of the Majority who are demanding that Ken Ofori-Atta be fired as the finance minister have intimated that they will not attend the budget presentation if Ofori-Atta, whose firing they are demanding, appears on the floor of the House.
“We’ve gone back to (our demand for the President to) sack him now and therefore should the budget be presented under the stamp of the Finance Minister, we’ll not participate because as far as we’re concerned we’re never going to do business with him.
“We’re not saying we won’t do the President’s business. We’re saying we won’t do President’s business through Ofori-Atta. So if anybody else comes with President’s business, we’ll participate,” Andy Appiah-Kubi, Asante Akim North MP told Joy News.
According to sources, both majority and minority MPs are likely to boycott the presentation, which situation will make it impossible for the minister to present the budget to the House because there will be a lack of quorum as required by the Constitution.
But in a press statement issued and signed by the Assin Central legislator, he said:
“Over the last few days, however, I have become aware of a troubling public declaration of intention by some aggrieved New Patriotic Party (NPP) Members of Parliament that they will neither attend Thursday’s sitting of Parliament nor have anything to do with subsequent Parliamentary discussions and debate on the 2023 Budget should Mr Ofori-Atta be the Minister presenting it to the House.
“The said MPs have openly stated that they will only attend proceedings if Mr Ofori-Atta, who they – rightly or wrongly – blame for the country’s prevailing economic difficulties, is removed from office. I find the said public declarations not only unfortunate but regrettable.”
“Ghanaians need, therefore, their elected representatives to show up for work and help them survive the worsening global economic turmoil. It is not the time to play political games or feed egos. I firmly believe that if there is ever any time that Ghanaians expect us to do our duty to Ghana unconditionally, it is now.
“We must not and cannot sacrifice that responsibility to our people on the side issue of who presents the 2023 Budget to Parliament. Let us show leadership and demonstrate solidarity with the struggling masses of our people by turning out in our numbers to support the President’s proposed plan to put Ghana back on the path of economic recovery and triumph,” Agyapong’s statement entreated.
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Read below Kennedy Agyapong’s statement:
Statement by Kennedy Agyapong calling on all Majority Members of Parliament to Attend and Participate fully in the 2023 Budget Presentation, related discussions, debate and approval.
The Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, is expected to present to Parliament the 2023 Budget and Economic Policy of the Government of Ghana on Thursday, November 24, 2022.
Mr Ofori-Atta will be presenting the budget to Parliament for and on behalf of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on the authority of Article 179(1) of Ghana’s Constitution of 1992, which commands the President to “cause to be prepared and laid before Parliament at least one month before the end of the financial year, estimates of the revenues and expenditure of the Government of Ghana for the following financial year.”
Over the last few days, however, I have become aware of a troubling public declaration of intention by some aggrieved New Patriotic Party (NPP) Members of Parliament that they will neither attend Thursday’s sitting of Parliament nor have anything to do with subsequent Parliamentary discussions and debate on the 2023 Budget should Mr Ofori-Atta be the Minister presenting it to the House.
The said MPs have openly stated that they will only attend proceedings if Mr Ofori-Atta, who they – rightly or wrongly – blame for the country’s prevailing economic difficulties, is removed from office. I find the said public declarations not only unfortunate but regrettable.
I know fully well that calls for the sacking of Mr Ofori-Atta reached the President in September, and he has given assurances that he will revisit the matter after the Budget presentation and a successful end to Ghana’s ongoing negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The leadership of the Majority Group later issued a statement agreeing to the President’s request. Therefore, the insistence by some MPs that they will not attend Thursday’s proceedings means no more than an attempt to blackmail or unduly force the hands of the President and or undermine his authority and agenda for Ghanaians. That cannot be right. The President is our leader and deserves the full benefit of the doubt if any.
In any case, we have all been elected as Members of Parliament to serve the best interests of the people of our individual and collective constituencies. Given the crippling economic crisis facing the people of Ghana and their businesses, it is the highest level of insensitivity towards the plight of our nation and her people for any elected representative or group of elected representatives to use their public offices to attempt to hold hostage efforts to address the economic problems facing all of us.
Instead, the patriotic, urgent, compassionate and proper thing to do is first to help the government pass its budget and then later confront and address, if we must, the issue of who is fit or not fit to lead the Ministry of Finance.
These are very challenging global times, with escalating energy and food prices pushing millions in Africa and elsewhere into extreme poverty and threatening the internal security of many nations, including ours. Ghanaians need, therefore, their elected representatives to show up for work and help them survive the worsening global economic turmoil. It is not the time to play political games or feed egos.
I firmly believe that if there is ever any time that Ghanaians expect us to do our duty to Ghana unconditionally, it is now. We must not and cannot sacrifice that responsibility to our people on the side issue of who presents the 2023 Budget to Parliament.
Let us show leadership and demonstrate solidarity with the struggling masses of our people by turning out in our numbers to support the President’s proposed plan to put Ghana back on the path of economic recovery and triumph.
Every NPP MP has to preserve and ensure that the agenda of the Akufo-Addo government for Ghana succeeds, otherwise, the people of Ghana would have no reason to return the NPP to power in 2024.
By this statement, I am also calling on the good people of Ghana to keep the faith and trust that the NPP government has the right plan, strategy, and requisite expertise to steer our country out of the prevailing economic headwinds.
He claims that the minister will deliver the same old speech, which won’t provide Ghanaians with any real solutions to their economic woes.
The Finance Minister has nothing to contribute, he said, according to TV3 in Accra.
If you recall, in the previous two or three budgets he reviewed, we predicted that it would not end well, and the situation is just becoming worse as time goes on.
Napare continued: “We don’t expect anything new from him and our position has been buttressed by the Majority side who are also saying that they don’t have any confidence in him.
“Even though we said it is Ken Ofori-Atta, it is not only him because it is not an individual who prepares the budget, it is a team, so it is the entire team that we don’t have confidence in.
“Because [Ofori-Atta] is leading, he is the one who takes the decision, he is the head of the team that is why we are singling him out for responsibility.”
GhanaWeb has gathered that the Minister risks meeting an empty Parliament when he appears in the House.
According to sources, both majority and minority MPs are likely to absent themselves, which will make it impossible for the minister to present the budget because there will be a lack of quorum as required by the Constitution.
Some 98 NPP MPs insist that they will boycott the budget presentation if the minister in particular appears before the House.
“We’ve gone back to (our demand for the President to) sack him now and therefore should the budget be presented under the stamp of the Finance Minister, we’ll not participate because as far as we’re concerned we’re never going to do business with him,” Andy Appiah-Kubi said.
The Asante Akim North MP further explained on JoyNews’ PM Express programme on Tuesday, November 15, 2022, that they will only participate in the budget presentation and appropriation if the President appoints someone else other than Ken Ofori-Atta to present the budget.
“We’re not saying we won’t do the President’s business. We’re saying we won’t do President’s business through Ofori-Atta. So if anybody else comes with President’s business, we’ll participate,” Appiah-Kubi stated.
Member of Parliament for Bortianor-Ngleshie-Amanfro, Sylvester Tetteh, has urged the general public not to doubt the resolve of the majority caucus to get Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta removed from office.
According to him, the entire caucus has now decided that the minister will be removed after he has completed the initial stage of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), presented the 2023 budget, and seen to the completion of the appropriation bill for the budget as the president has requested.
Speaking on Good Morning Ghana, monitored by GhanaWeb, Sylvester Tetteh added that Ofori-Atta, by his public pronouncements, has shown that he is not willing to step down, but the caucus will ensure that he is removed after he completes these three things.
“So, people should not be so much worried about the position and integrity of the majority caucus calling for Ken Ofori-Atta (to be sacked). Of course, there are two players in this, the president asking him to leave or he, himself, voluntarily resigning.
“His public posturing and everything suggests that he will not resign. He has clearly indicated he won’t go anywhere. He has not even heard the cry of the majority Members of Parliament, to say the least.
“I’m a Member of Parliament here today, and we don’t even have a budget brief to make an input. So, I’m going to sit in the chamber and open the budget for the first time,” he said.
Meanwhile, the minority leader, Haruna Iddrisu, has expressed disappointment over the decision of the majority not to support the minority in the impeachment of the finance minister, Ken Ofori-Atta.
According to him, even though the majority failed to support them, the minority will not abandon the censorship motion.
Speaking to the media in parliament, he said President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo also indicated that Akufo-Addo does not respect public opinion.
“…President Akufo-Addo will go down in history under the fourth republic as the president who most disrespected public opinion because as far as we are concerned public opinion is not supportive and favourable to the continuous stay in office of Ken Ofori-Atta. We feel led down and we feel betrayed by the majority caucus who have shown no wits in supporting us with our impeachment process within the letter and spirit of Article 82 of the 1992 constitution we are not abandoning our censorship motion,” he said.
In his appeal, Anas urged the Commission to examine into claims that Ghana’s loans and bonds were used to benefit the private firms of both the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, and the previous Minister of State for the Finance Ministry, Charles Adu Boahen.
In a radio appearance, CHRAJ Commissioner Joseph Whittal stated that the Commission has received a formal complaint from the undercover journalist and is currently reviewing the information provided.
“The allegations are that there is a conflict of interest in terms of their official duties as public officers and the companies in which they have interest in terms of government bonds and so the case is going through the standard process of assessment in order to make sure that it meets procedural requirement under the Commission’s regulation as well as whether it is really within the mandate of the Commission. Based on that, we will then decide what next steps to take,” Whittal told Accra-based Joy News.
Charles Adu Boahen was dismissed by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo after allegations that he demanded some monies to facilitate a meeting between undercover investigators disguised as investors and Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia.
Per Tiger Eye PI documentary dubbed ‘Galamsey Economy’, Adu Boahen said Bawumia could be paid $200,000 as an appearance fee for investors. This is in addition to positions offered to the Vice President’s siblings – a claim the dismissed Minister of State has denied.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta when he appeared before the ad-hoc committee hearing a vote of censure against him denied being embroiled in a conflict of interest given the allegations by the Minority that his company, Databank Limited have been benefitting from transactions on government bond issuance.
Ofori-Atta said the proponents’ allegations do not have “weight for censure”.
Black Star Brokerage, owned by Charles Adu Boahen, has also been named as one of the firms playing the role of financial advisors to government transactions on the international market.
Senyo Hosi, a financial and economic policy specialist, has narrowed down a list of Ghanaians who are knowledgeable about economic issues and could succeed Ken Ofori-Atta as finance minister.
Senyo thinks that the moment has come for the President to appoint someone who will boost investor confidence while fostering national political stability.
“It is time for a technocratic and meritocratic selection of one truly acknowledged and approved by the financial markets and across the political divide,” he wrote in an open letter to the president.
For the now vacant position of a minister of state in charge of finance after Charles Adu-Boahen’s sack, Senyo Hosi noted that the Finance Ministry must lead the charge as the size of government remains a challenge and a cause of worry for many Ghanaians.
He said: “As the size of government remains one of concern, there is no doubt that the Ministry of Finance should lead the way in its resizing.”
“ I recommend the following for consideration as the replacement for the Minister of State for Finance,” he added.
1. Mr. Kwamena Asomaning – CEO, Stanbic Bank Ghana Limited
2. Mansa Nettey – CEO, Standard Chartered Bank Ghana
3. Alex Emmanuel Asiedu – Head of Investments, Africa Region, Standard Bank
4. Prof. Festus Ebo Turkson – Economist & Lecturer, University of Ghana
5. Josephine Anan-Ankomah – Group Executive- Commercial, Ecobank Group.
He however concluded by adding that “Your Excellency, the above names are just to give tangibility to the concept advised. I believe there are other equally competent candidates you may consider, but I, nonetheless, urge you to consider the guiding principle expatiated above – put the national interest above all else. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown. Your current position is truly not envied.
“I have often said the presidency is easily the loneliest job in the world. Almost everyone, including your conjugants, is in pursuit of your influence for their private gain. You still will have to make a call!” Senyo noted.
Senyo Hosi, a financial and economic policy analyst, has voiced his opinion on the present public discussion on the choice of dismissing or compelling Ken Ofori-Atta to quit as finance minister due to the nation’s current economic difficulties.
According to Mr. Hosi, Ghana will become “ungovernable” as a result of the President’s refusal to remove Ken Ofori-Atta despite opposition from the governing party members.
“History will not be kind to us if we have no lessons to learn from the executive-parliament impasse of the 3rd Republic. I hold nothing against KOA. I believe he has done his bit and run his race, but Ghana is bigger than us all. We must be humble about our reality if we can’t change its tide,” portions of his write-up read.
He continued, “Unsurprisingly, the political hawks in your party have lined up in pursuit of his position or to influence his replacement. I can understand the politics. Unfortunately, the dire situation we find ourselves in as an economy and to a material extent, as a country, transcends the party politicking characteristic of our time”.
He claims that in order to restore macroeconomic stability, the government is currently seeking an IMF program, and that investors and citizens around the world are instead watching for indications of a viable fiscal plan.
Bright Simons raised alarm about the government’s plan to impose higher consumption taxes on already-burdened citizens in a series of tweets on November 23.
Bright Simons has also questioned whether an evenly split Parliament, especially the Minority side, will throw their support behind a budget that seeks to impose more taxes on already burdened citizens.
He also indicated government’s inability to consult civil society groups and other relevant stakeholders ahead of the 2023 budget before lawmakers on November 24, 2022.
“The government of Ghana intends to present its budget for 2023 tomorrow. Given the intensity of the economic crisis, investors globally are looking for signs of a credible fiscal plan out of the mess. The government intends to increase consumption taxes. The Parliament is evenly split,” he wrote.
“Anyone who reads bbsimons.com know my analysis of the biggest challenge ahead in resolving the crisis: social and political consensus. It is thus shocking that tomorrow the government expects the Opposition and civil society to support a budget it has not consulted anyone on,” Mr Simons added.
Meanwhile, Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, has been under intense pressure from members of the governing New Patriotic Party to resign over the current economic challenges which has impacted almost all economic indicators.
The Minority in parliament have also filed a censure motion against Ken Ofori-Atta on some seven grounds.
The minority leader, Haruna Iddrisu, has expressed disappointment over the decision of the majority not to support the minority in the impeachment of the finance minister, Ken Ofori-Atta.
According to him, despite the fact that the majority failed to support them, the minority will not abandon the censorship motion.
Speaking to the media in parliament, he said President Akufo-Addo also indicated that Akufo-Addo does not respect public opinion.
“…President Akufo-Addo will go down in history under the fourth republic as the president who most disrespected public opinion because as far as we are concerned public opinion is not supportive and favourable to the continuous stay in office of Ken Ofori-Atta. We feel led down and we feel betrayed by the majority caucus who have shown no wits in supporting us with our impeachment process within the letter and spirit of Article 82 of the 1992 constitution we are not abandoning our censorship motion.”
The Majority Caucus in Parliament has rescinded their decision to boycott the 2023 Budget Statement by embattled Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta.
This comes after a meeting between the lawmakers and leaders of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) which was held on November 23.
A statement co-signed by Majority Chief Whip, Frank Annoh-Dompreh and NPP General Secretary Justin Kodua Frimpong read in part: “At a meeting this evening, the 22 of November 2022, involving the Majority Caucus, the Leadership of the Party and the Council of Elders, it has been agreed by all to refocus and recline to the earlier position requested by the President.”
The managing editor of the Insight Newspaper, Kwesi Pratt Jnr, has bemoaned the instance of Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta staying at post despite the many calls for him to step down.
Speaking in an interview on Peace FM, monitored by GhanaWeb, Pratt wondered why the minister who claimed he resigned from the DataBank on health grounds is healthy enough to be a minister of state.
He added that Ofori-Atta should resign because the position in the finance ministry is not his personal business.
“If I were Ofori-Atta, I would have resigned long ago. He said he works for free but he is refusing to resign. He said he resigned from Data Bank because of his health.
“And so if you cannot do the work at Data Bank because of your health, how is it that you are healthy enough to be the finance minister of the whole of Ghana,” he said in Twi.
The veteran journalist further stated that he still holds the view that sacking Ofori-Atta will not make any significate difference but it is time for him (the finance minister) to go.
“The minister can choose not to resign but he must know that his decision must meet the demands of Ghanaians because he is not running a private business,” he said.
Meanwhile, the government has indicated that it will present the 2023 budget in Parliament on Thursday, November 24, 2024. However, the person who presents the budget has become an issue.
This is because 98 MPs of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) have indicated that they will boycott the reading of the budget if Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta is the one to present it.
Also, an ad hoc committee of Parliament set up to investigate a vote of censure motion against Ofori-Atta by National Democratic Congress MPs is expected to present its report to the house on Tuesday, November 22.
Former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Chamber of Bulk Oil Distributors, Senyo Hosi, has suggested to President Akufo-Addo five financial experts who should head the Finance Ministry instead of Ken Ofori-Atta.
The personalities suggested include; First Deputy Governor, Bank of Ghana (BoG), Dr. Maxwell Opoku Afari, Former Ecobank Group CEO, Mr. Albert Essien, Former President of GAB and current Chairman, ESLA PLC, Mr. Simon Dornoo, Former Governor, BoG, Dr. Paul Acquah and Tax Policy Expert, Lawyer, Economist & Lecturer, Dr. Abdallah Ali-Nakyea.
In an open letter to the president, Mr Hosi, stated categorically a replacement has become inevitable since “none of your current MPs and Ministers can offer what this market needs.”
According to him, the country requires appointees who will uphold fiscal discipline against party political considerations, a situation that is currently not the case.
“It is time for a technocratic and meritocratic appointment of one truly respected and accepted by the financial markets and across the political divide,” he added.
Mr Hosi noted that there are other equally competent candidates the President can choose from, nonetheless, “I urge you to consider the guiding principle expatiated above – put the national interest above all else. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown.”
Following his submission, he told the President “the power is yours,” a catchphrase by Captain Planet, his favourite cartoon character.
His request comes at a time when several Ghanaians including the Minority in Parliament have voted a no confidence in Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, who is supposed to ensure the smooth running of the economy.
Mr Ofori-Atta risks losing his job as he is currently facing a censure motion filed by the Minority in Parliament.
Meanwhile, Mr Hosi wants the President to consider some five personalities for the role of Minister of State at the Finance Ministry, a position formerly held by Charles Adu Boahen.
The five are Mr. Kwamena Asomaning – CEO, Stanbic Bank Ghana Limited, Mansa Nettey – CEO, Standard Chartered Bank Ghana, Alex Emmanuel Asiedu – Head of Investments, Africa Region, Standard Bank, Prof. Festus Ebo Turkson – Economist & Lecturer, University of Ghana and Josephine Anan-Ankomah – Group Executive- Commercial, Ecobank Group.
Mr Adu Boahen was dismissed by the President after he was accused by investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, of corruption-related activities.
National Chairman of the Progressive People’s Party (PPP), Nana Ofori Owusu, has questioned why Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta is so adamant about leaving office, even though he claims to be working for free.
Nana Owusu said that he was one of the first people to commend the finance minister for working for the countryfor free but he does not understand why he is refusing to vacate his position despite calls by many Ghanaians for him to step down.
“When I heard the finance minister does not take a salary, I applauded him because of his willingness to sacrifice his time and leave all his businesses to work for Ghana for free.
“Now, I don’t understand why the minister for finance, who says is not paid GH¢1 … who gets nothing from the public sector, is fighting so hard to keep a position his own people, including majority of MPs of his party, are urging him to relinquish.
“You are serving us for free and we are saying that we are grateful for the service but you should step aside and you are saying no I will continue serving,” he said in Twi in a Peace FM interview monitored by GhanaWeb.
The PPP national chairman added that the refusal of the finance minister to resign feeds into the conflict-of-interest allegation against him.
Meanwhile, the Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), Joseph Whittal, has said that CHRAJ has received a petition from Tiger Eye PI, the outfit of Investigative Journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, to investigate Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta.
According to Whittal, Ana’s outfit wants CHRAJ to investigate Ofori-Atta for the conflict of interest allegation levelled against him for the involvement of his bank, Data Bank, in loans the government of Ghana contracts.
He added that the commission is currently examining the petition as to whether it has merits.
The past few weeks must have been among the most difficult for you. You have not only contended with your political opposition but, ironically, with members of your party over none other than, undoubtedly, one of your foremost confidants and trusted lieutenants.
The ask for the head of Ken Ofori-Atta, in your case, may be akin to the ask for a part of your soul. We may love or hate you, but for sure, we can’t take this from you: You don’t take loyalty to your team lightly. The demand of the 98 or so NPP MPs for the Finance Minister to go, despite the many overtures you have made to appease them, seems to suggest that the exit of Ken Ofori Atta (KOA) has become almost inevitable.
Maintaining and superintending this deadlock will make the country ungovernable. History will not be kind to us if we have no lessons to learn from the executive-parliament impasse of the 3rd Republic. I hold nothing against KOA. I believe he has done his bit and run his race, but Ghana is bigger than us all. We must be humble about our reality if we can’t change its tide.
Unsurprisingly, the political hawks in your party have lined up in pursuit of his position or to influence his replacement. I can understand the politics. Unfortunately, the dire situation we find ourselves in as an economy and to a material extent, as a country, transcends the party politicking characteristic of our
time.
Mr. President, the value of our Euro bonds, for example, has fallen by over 60% in barely a year and same can be said of the value of our Cedi. Respectfully, this sudden drop for any financial market is catastrophic. It is inspired by a loss of confidence in government policy and information credibility on the local and
international financial markets.
In simple terms, the market does not trust what government says it has done or intends to do. We have simply lost fiscal credibility and it is tied to the political frame of the leadership of the financial sector. Any competent analyst will tell you that the market wants the head of KOAmore than the politicians. The market holds him responsible (whether fairly or unfairly) for failing to hold the fiscal line and marshal the discipline required for our debt sustainability. Making E-levy so central to fiscal policy only for its forecasting to woefully fail as well as the debt ratios and his anti-IMF stubbornness did him and us no good.
To make matters worse, inflation and the depreciation of the currency have migrated macro-economic jargons from their obscure place of academic speak to the very present reality of the average Ghanaian. In other words, we can feel it in our pockets. Ghanaians describe this in three Akan words: “Kurom Ay3 Hye”.
Unfortunately, in such times, it is the Finance Minister the people see and think of. Mr. President, your appointment (if you will have to make one) of the next Finance Minister will easily be the most important decision you will be making on the economy as you wrap up your tenure in office.
Your decision must be inspired by Ghana’s economic recovery and not your party’s electoral viability in 2024. Mr. President, it is time to think about the next generation and not the next election. It is time for patriotic leadership.
With fiscal credibility lost, the market does not just need an IMF. It needs credible fiscal leadership even more. Your appointment of the next Finance Minister must be purely hinged on competence and financial market credibility. Having said this, the out-and-out politician in your party and overt party sympathizer will not inspire the credibility the market seeks.
To be blunt, none of your current MPs and Ministers can offer what this market needs. The market will not have tolerance for an appointee who is likely
to sacrifice fiscal discipline for party political considerations in an election year when fiscal recklessness is often the name of the game.
It is time for a technocratic and meritocratic appointment of one truly respected and accepted by the financial markets and across the political divide. I highly recommend you consult key stakeholders in the local and international markets (Banks, fund managers, Multilateral agencies, etc.) in your shortlisting
and considerations. The following names I find worth considering:
1. Dr. Maxwell Opoku Afari – First Deputy Governor, BoG
2. Mr. Albert Essien – Former Ecobank Group CEO
3. Mr. Simon Dornoo – Former President of GAB and current Chairman, ESLA PLC
4. Dr. Paul Acquah – Former Governor, BoG
5. Dr. Abdallah Ali-Nakyea – Tax Policy Expert, Lawyer, Economist & Lecturer
As the size of government remains one of concern, there is no doubt that the Ministry of Finance should lead the way in its resizing. I recommend the following for consideration as the replacement for the Minister of State for Finance:
1. Mr. Kwamena Asomaning – CEO, Stanbic Bank Ghana Limited
2. Mansa Nettey – CEO, Standard Chartered Bank Ghana
3. Alex Emmanuel Asiedu – Head of Investments, Africa Region, Standard Bank
4. Prof. Festus Ebo Turkson – Economist & Lecturer, University of Ghana
5. Josephine Anan-Ankomah – Group Executive- Commercial, Ecobank Group
Your Excellency, the above names are just to give tangibility to the concept advised. I believe there are other equally competent candidates you may consider, but I, nonetheless, urge you to consider the guiding principle expatiated above – put the national interest above all else. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown.
Your current position is truly not envied. I have often said the presidency is easily the loneliest job in the world. Almost everyone, including your conjugants, is in pursuit of your influence for their private gain. You still will have to make a call!
A call for legacy, or a call for politicking? As Captain Planet, my favourite cartoon character, would say: “The power is yours!”
DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author(s) and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana.
The Majority Caucus in Parliament has mended all cracks in their front ahead of the November 24 reading of the 2023 Budget Statement by embattled Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta.
A meeting between the lawmakers and leaders of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) was held on November 23 at which a number of agreements were reached.
The main points are that the Minister will be supported in presenting the budget and seeing through its appropriation as well as be allowed to see through the current phase of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund, IMF.
The meeting comes on the back of a renewed call by some 98 NPP MPs who had threatened to boycott the budget presentation if Ofori-Atta appears to present it.
A statement co-signed by Majority Chief Whip, Frank Annoh-Dompreh and NPP General Secretary Justin Kodua Frimpong read in part: “At a meeting this evening, the 22 of November 2022, involving the Majority Caucus, the Leadership of the Party and the Council of Elders, it has been agreed by all to refocus and recline to the earlier position requested by the President.”
The three broad areas agreed on were as follows
1. The demand be stood down until the conclusion of the round of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) which would feed into the 2023 Budget;
2. The presentation of the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy on the 24th November 2022 by the Finance Minister on behalf of the President; and
3. The subsequent presentation and passage of the Appropriation Bill
“The meeting agreed that the President would act upon the initial request of the NPP Parliamentary Caucus after the conclusion of these matters,” the statement added.
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Find the full statement below:
22nd November 2022.
RESOLUTION OF IMPASSE IN THE NPP PARLIAMENTARY GROUP.
Over the past two weeks, especially, after the President had engaged the Majority Caucus over calls for the ouster of the Minister of Finance as well as the Minister of State at the Ministry of Finance and a statement on the engagement had been issued, the country has, witnessed a heightened public/media discussion on same subject matter.
There have been occasional individual interventions some of which have not helped the resolution of the issue in contention. On the other hand, some of these interventions have contributed to escalate tensions and suspicions.
At a meeting this evening, the 22 of November 2022, involving the Majority Caucus, the Leadership of the Party and the Council of Elders, it has been agreed by all to refocus and recline to the earlier position requested by the President, to wit:
1. The demand be stood down until the conclusion of the round of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) which would feed into the 2023 Budget;
2. The presentation of the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy on the 24th November 2022 by the Finance Minister on behalf of the President; and
3. The subsequent presentation and passage of the Appropriation Bill
The meeting agreed that the President would act upon the initial request of the NPP Parliamentary Caucus after the conclusion of these matters.
In the meantime, the Leadership of the Parliamentary group and the Leadership of the Party counselled the Honourable Members of the Parliamentary Party to resort to the Caucus ‘communication channels and, to the largest extent possible, work together as one Caucus unit.
Leadership and the Party in this regard call upon the Members of Parliament to attend to all Government Businesses in the House including, in particular, the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy and all connected matters.
SIGNED
HON. ANNOH-DOMPREH, (MP) MAJORITY CHIEF WHIP, PARLIAMENT OF GHANA
JUSTIN KODUA FRIMPONG, GENERAL SECRETARY NEW PATRIOTIC PARTY
The Minority in Parliament has expressed disappointment at the Majority Caucus in failing to support the censure motion against the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta.
The Minority filed a censure motion against the Finance Minister over allegations of conflict of interest, financial recklessness leading to the collapse of the Ghana Cedi and gross mismanagement of the economy among others.
Some New Patriotic Party Members of Parliament also called on the President to dismiss the Finance Minister due to the current economic hardships. They had threatened to boycott the 2023 Budget presentation scheduled for Thursday, November 24.
But national executives and the Council of Elders of the NPP on Tuesday stepped in to resolve the impasse between the NPP members of the Majority Caucus and the President over the demands for the sacking of the Finance Minister.
A statement jointly signed by the Majority Chief Whip, Frank Annoh-Dompreh and the General Secretary of the NPP, Justin Koduah as a resolution to the ongoing impasse, urged the Majority MPs to put their demands on ice until negotiations for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) bail-out are completed.
Addressing the media on Wednesday, the Minority Leader in Parliament, Haruna Iddrisu said the Majority caucus has failed the public by not supporting the censure.
“President Akufo-Addo will go down in history as the President who mostly disrespected public appeal because as far as we are concerned public opinion is not supportive and favourable to the continuous stay in office of this failing, beleaguered lame-duck Finance Minister Ken Ofori Atta.”
“We feel let down, and we feel betrayed by the Majority caucus, who have shown no wits in supporting us with our impeachment process…We are not abandoning our censorship motion, and we are in it for the long haul,” the Minority Leader told Journalists on Wednesday.
National Chairman of the Progressive People’s Party (PPP), Nana Ofori Owusu, has questioned why Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta is so adamant about leaving office, even though he claims to be working for free.
Nana Owusu said that he was one of the first people to commend the finance minister for working for the country for free but he does not understand why he is refusing to vacate his position despite calls by many Ghanaians for him to step down.
“When I heard the finance minister does not take a salary, I applauded him because of his willingness to sacrifice his time and leave all his businesses to work for Ghana for free.
“Now, I don’t understand why the minister for finance, who says is not paid GH¢1 … who gets nothing from the public sector, is fighting so hard to keep a position his own people, including majority of MPs of his party, are urging him to relinquish.
“You are serving us for free and we are saying that we are grateful for the service but you should step aside and you are saying no I will continue serving,” he said in Twi in a Peace FM interview monitored by GhanaWeb.
The PPP national chairman added that the refusal of the finance minister to resign feeds into the conflict-of-interest allegation against him.
Meanwhile, the Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), Joseph Whittal, has said that CHRAJ has received a petition from Tiger Eye PI, the outfit of Investigative Journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, to investigate Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta.
According to Whittal, Ana’s outfit wants CHRAJ to investigate Ofori-Atta for the conflict of interest allegation levelled against him for the involvement of his bank, Data Bank, in loans the government of Ghana contracts.
He added that the commission is currently examining the petition as to whether it has merits.