The World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and all ratings agencies have been slammed for using the wrong indicator to assess Ghana’s fiscal economy.
According to Economist, Dr. Saed Boakye of the Institute of Fiscal Studies, it is wrong for these institutions to rely so much on the debt to Gross Domestic Product ratio to measure the country’s financial capacity to repay its debt.
Dr. Boakye rather wants the Bretton Wood institutions and the ratings agencies to use the interest payment to revenue ratio indicator to assess the fiscal performance of the economy.
Speaking to Joy Business in reaction to government’s move to raise about US$1 billion through the sale of sustainable bond to refinance domestic debt used for social and environmental projects, including loans taken to service the free senior secondary school policy, Dr. Boakye said the authorities have failed to do the needful.
“The IMF and World Bank must stopped talking about debt to GDP ratio. I have data over here; in 2019 for instance Ghana’s debt to GDP ratio was around 62% and interest payment as a ratio of revenue was 37%. Britain’s debt to GDP ratio was 85% in 2019 but interest payment as a share of revenue was only 6.9%. You, your debt to GDP ratio was 62% and you were using 37% to pay interest in 2019”.
He further said “the correct measure of a country debt burden is how much out of your revenue you are using to service your debt; that is the bottom line.”
“So if you are a rating agency, IMF, World Bank and you keep on talking about this intermediary measure which is debt to GDP ratio, it is only an intermediary measure because its importance is due to the fact it is from GDP that government revenue is generated. But the question is, has the country raised enough revenue”, he stressed.
“Britain is having total revenue to GDP of about 39%, Ghana is around 15%. So if their debt to GDP ratio is about 85% and your debt to GDP ratio is 72%, they are able to raise enough revenue than you”, he added.
Ghana’s interest payment is presently estimated at 49 percent to revenue in 2021.
Ghana to issue $1bn Sustainable Bonds, but will shoot up debt stock
Ghana is planning to raise as much as $1 billion through a sale of sustainable bonds, including Africa’s first social debt to fund a flagship policy to broaden access to education.
The proceeds would help refinance domestic debt used for social and environmental projects, including loans taken to pay for the government’s free senior secondary school policy, Minister of State at the Ministry of Finance, Charles Adu Boahen told Bloomberg.
The use of social bonds has boomed since the coronavirus pandemic, yet so far only a few sovereign issuers have sold them, including Chile and Ecuador. The European Union has emerged as the largest player, to fund a jobs recovery programme, smashing global debt demand records in the process as investors flock to ethical assets.
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