The Member of Parliament for Subin, Eugene Boakye Antwi, says the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is not taking Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta seriously.
According to him, some unsavory comments made by Ken Ofori-Atta concerning the IMF and international rating agencies have caused a dent in the Finance Minister’s credibility.
This he says makes him unfit to lead the country’s financial team to negotiate with the Bretton Woods Institution.
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express, he said, “Where we find ourselves today, it is about credibility. The IMF is not taking Ken Ofori-Atta seriously no matter what anybody says. We still have not been able to achieve anything. If we’re going to get any money into the system it’ll probably be in January thereabout. But we are sinking, we are sinking.”
His comment supports earlier calls for the Finance Minister to resign by the MP for Mpraeso, Davis Opoku Ansah.
Mr. Opoku Ansah had suggested that Ken-Ofori Atta’s continuous stay in office was delaying the IMF bailout the country is seeking.
He added that the embattled MP cannot lead the country into such valuable negotiations.
“He doesn’t have the credibility to lead a debt restructuring program, hence his delegation of responsibility to a 5-member committee,” he wrote in a Facebook post on Tuesday.
In the same vein, the Subin MP has called on the President to, with immediate effect, replace the Finance Minister with a new person.
According to him, a fresh face in the Finance Minister’s office will reinstall confidence in the country’s economic recovery programme and will hence quicken the IMF negotiations.
“And this so called mantra of ‘we have the men, we have the men’, it’s like we’ve become a laughing stock. And we do have the men so President Akufo-Addo should deploy the men. We do have the men in the party. What kind of education has Ofori-Atta got? What kind of exposure has he got that others haven’t got? This is where we’re coming.
“So sometimes by just putting a new face on the seat, we’ll sort of bring confidence back to the economy; stabilize the markets for us for us to be able to go to these negotiations with a firm request. And that’s what we are asking.
“And as I have said to several stations today, we’re running a democracy; we’re not running a family dynasty, that’s what people must get into their heads. This party is not just about a certain group of people or a person, this party is about all of us,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
One student per tablet policy: More tablets for Ashanti Region Schools
1 hour -
BOSAG officially unveiled; positioning Ghana as Africa’s premier BPO destination
2 hours -
Gold Fields may sell smaller mines in Ghana after Osisko acquisition
2 hours -
Nigeria plans $28bn spending for 2025 budget, minister says
2 hours -
Africa grapples with forecasting challenge as weather disasters loom
2 hours -
Europe’s flying taxi dreams falter as cash runs short
3 hours -
Al Fayed’s brother Salah also abused us, women say
3 hours -
I blame the Church for my brother’s death, says Zimbabwean sister of UK child abuser’s victim
3 hours -
South Africa cuts supplies to thousands of illegal miners hiding underground
4 hours -
Nigeria head five Afcon 2025 qualifiers as Ghana given hope
4 hours -
Trump’s pledge to axe the Department of Education explained
4 hours -
‘Major supplier’ of people-smuggling boats arrested
4 hours -
Meta fined €798m over ‘unfair’ Facebook Marketplace
4 hours -
UN climate talks ‘no longer fit for purpose’ say key experts
5 hours -
Conor McGregor admits ‘taking cocaine’ on night of alleged rape
5 hours