Ghana's public debt stock hit ¢273.8 billion, about 71% of Gross Domestic Product in September 2020, according to the November 2020 Summary of Financial and Economic Data by the Bank of Ghana.
This is equivalent to $48 billion.
Between July and September 2020, the nation added ¢10.7 billion to its public debt stock.
The rising debt though a worry has been precipitated by the impact of covid-19 whereby the nation had to borrow extra to finance the budget and also support Micro, Small and Medium Scale Enterprises who were heavily impacted by covid-19.
But for covid-19, the nation’s debt wouldn’t have reached the present levels.
Many countries including some advanced economies had no option but to borrow from the International Monetary Fund and World Baank to stabliise their economies.
According to the data, the external component of the debt stood at ¢138.5 billion ($24.3 billion), about 35.9% of GDP.
The domestic component was however estimated at ¢135.3 billion, about 35.1% of GDP.
On the other hand, the financial sector resolution bond stood at ¢15.4 billion, about 4.0% of GDP.
IMF projects 76.7% debt-to-GDP ratio
The International Monetary Fund earlier forecast a 76.7% of debt-to-GDP ratio for the country this year.
It however said in its Sub Saharan Africa Regional Economic Outlook report that the debt-to-GDP ratio will however drop slightly to 74.7 percent of GDP in 2021.
The Bretton Wood institution said the rising debt however possess a threat to both the fiscal and monetary economy, particularly revenue mobilization, exchange rate and inflation.
However, it was confident the authorities will do better in 2021 to bring the situation under control.
World Bank says Ghana isn't borrowing too much
The World Bank Country Director for Ghana, Pierre Frank Laporte says the nation isn’t borrowing too much to be criticized that it is moving into a debt distress country category
Mr. Laporte however advised the government to pay critical attention to the macroeconomic stability by being prudent in spending to avert over-borrowing.
Finance Minister calls for debt forgiveness
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta at the recent IMF/ World Bank meeting called for debt forgiveness and cancellation for vulnerable and debt distressed countries in the world.
Mr Ofori-Atta said the countries needed the gesture to help empower them financially to be able to protect lives and rescue their economies from the impact of the ravaging coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
If the Bretton Wood institutions in particular heed to call, the nation’s debt will go down appreciably.
Latest Stories
-
Sports facilities are better managed by institutions – UG Sports Director on maintenance of Legon stadium
26 mins -
Ghanaian businesses must align vision with strategy to mitigate ESG Risks – KPMG
36 mins -
MTN achieves 30% localisation of Scancom PLC
37 mins -
Attorney-General: Some lawyers sacrifice ethics for ‘cheap’ political gains
48 mins -
Bond market: Volume up by 12.45% to GH¢746m
49 mins -
Cedi records year-to-date loss of nearly 29%; one dollar going for GH¢17.10
57 mins -
‘Our priorities are wrong in Ghana’ – UG Sports Director on sports development
58 mins -
The Fourth Estate’s investigative report wins 2nd place at 2024 AIJC
1 hour -
GPL: Our fans spur us on – GoldStars head coach Frimpong Manso on unbeaten run
2 hours -
Plantain chips are breaking hearts in Africa
2 hours -
61 new architects acquire state license to practice in Ghana
2 hours -
Masloc CEO honoured as capacity building Shero of the Year
3 hours -
MPs’ Repeated Attempts to Sue the Speaker: Unintended Consequences for the 2024 Elections?
3 hours -
Today’s front pages: Tuesday, November 5, 2024
3 hours -
Galamsey: Investigation into attack on Joy News’ Erastus Asare and colleagues already growing cold
3 hours