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Ghana in crisis: U-turn on IMF bailout sparks outcry | TV Shows


On Monday, July 25 at 19:30 GMT:
Ghana’s economy has been crippled by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, rampant inflation, the war in Ukraine and a depreciating currency. Now analysts warn that the country is close to a crisis.

In May the central bank governor said Ghana faced an overall balance of payments deficit of $934.5m in the first quarter of 2022, compared with $429.9m in the same period last year. Growth slowed to 3.3 percent in the first quarter of 2022, and inflation hit a record of 27.6 percent in May.

Critics say the government has recklessly managed its finances with excessive borrowing. The country now spends about a third of its expenditures just servicing debt alone, not including principal repayments.

In a U-turn from previous statements, this month the government announced it would hold formal talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) about a support package. This came just days after hundreds of citizens took to the streets protesting the mounting economic hardships. It is the second time in the past three years that Ghana has turned to the IMF for help.

Protest leaders from the Arise Ghana group in June said they were against the “persistence and astronomical hikes in fuel prices by the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government”, the “grabbing of State lands’” by government officials, and the introduction of a 1.5% tax levied on all electronic transactions. They are also calling for a full bi-partisan parliamentary probe into COVID-19 expenditures.

There is also dissent within the government on whether seeking assistance from the IMF is the best move forward. Several unions have criticised the move, saying it will create conditions that are unfavourable to Ghanians. One economist has said Ghana will become “ungovernable” if the IMF bailout requires wages to be frozen.

In this episode we’ll talk about Ghana’s worsening economic crisis and ask what IMF assistance means for Ghanaians.

In this episode of The Stream, we are joined by:
Theo Acheampong, @mytheoz
Economist and political risk analyst
Associate Lecturer, University of Aberdeen

Yvonne Mhango
Head of Africa Research & Africa Economist, Renaissance Capital, and Managing Director at Renaissance Capital

Sammy Gyamfi, @sammygyamfi2017
National Communications Officer, NDC
Protest leader with Arise Ghana





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