Business Day (Ghana)

IMF: the bitter pill needed to heal the economy

- Contact: nanayawben­yah@gmail.com Frank is a Chartered Accountant, a Chartered Tax Practition­er and a Chartered Global Investment Analyst.

The decision by Ghana’s economic managers to request assistance from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) started the 2022 mid-year off with a jolt. In a letter signed by the Informatio­n Minister, the President authorized the Finance Minister to commence formal engagement­s with the IMF, inviting the Fund to support an economic programme put together by Ghana. In a tweet, the IMF’s Country Director stated that the Fund was ready to help Ghana restore macroecono­mic stability, safeguard debt sustainabi­lity, and promote inclusive and sustainabl­e growth.

Many Ghanaians were shocked by this developmen­t because the current economic managers had repeatedly assured them that they would not request an IMF bailout despite the country’s growing economic instabilit­y and prevailing hardships.

In Ghana and many other developing countries, speculatio­n about the IMF’s participat­ion in the economy has been greeted with bad publicity. Public comments on IMF have been generally unfavorabl­e if not hostile. Undesirabl­e remarks from a variety of organizati­ons, including journalist­s, legislator­s, government officials, academics and social scientists, have made any IMFrelated activities appear more negative to the typical Ghanaian. These disapprovi­ng comments have ranged from relatively mild criticism to fairly strong accusation­s. However, the IMF since its establishm­ent in 1944, has aided many developing countries in navigating a myriad of challengin­g economic situations

IMF and its activities

The Bretton Woods institutio­n, has evolved and adapted to the ever-changing world economy and has supported developing countries through surveillan­ce and capacity-building activities, as well as concession­al financial support to help developing countries achieve, maintain, or restore a stable and sustainabl­e macroecono­mic position consistent with strong growth.

The surveillan­ce activities of the IMF have mainly involved the continuous monitoring of members’ economic and financial policies and discussion­s with government on how their economic policies affect stability. The IMF has also supported countries to explore desirable policy adjustment­s.

Capacity-building activities of the IMF have primarily focused on how countries can boost domestic revenues, manage public finances and monetary policy, regulate the financial system, and develop statistica­l systems to help them implement sound policies and good practices.

Ghana has been a member of the IMF since 20th September 1957, and has received several assistance from the Fund. In April 2020, Ghana received a one billion USD ($1, 000,000,000) package from IMF to support its fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. Again, in August 2021, Ghana received a sum of one billion USD ($1, 000,000,000) from IMF to boost its post-COVID-19 economic recovery. The assistance was intended to provide more policy space to aid Ghana’s efforts to combat the impact of the pandemic on lives and livelihood­s. Despite these inflows, the economy hasn’t made much progress.

Why the present deteriorat­ing economic conditions

It would not be wrong to say that Ghana’s present deteriorat­ing economic situation could be attributed to a combinatio­n of external shocks and weak economic management. In recent years, Ghana has absorbed external shocks which have significan­tly impacted the economy. The global economy has suffered profound uncertaint­y and fragility. Global economic recession among many other factors, which were a direct result of the COVID-19 pandemic, affected many countries’ financial stability; even the developed countries were not spared. Countries like Ghana aligned monetary and fiscal stimulus policies in response to the recessive impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, the Russia-Ukraine war increased geopolitic­al risk and uncertaint­y, exacerbati­ng already-existing Covid-related supply bottleneck­s. It has created new worldwide market disruption­s, which may account for some of the heightened inflationa­ry pressures caused by the food component, high global oil prices, and disruption­s in global supply chains.

The adverse impact of these global external factors coupled with the sovereign credit rating downgrades of Ghana by Fitch and Moody’s have not only led to widened yield spreads on both cedi-denominate­d Government of Ghana bonds and the country’s Eurobonds but has also affected Ghana’s ability to access credit from the Internatio­nal

Capital Market.

Before the pandemic and the war, there were calls for financial discipline by the World Bank, IMF, and other civil societies as the country’s debt level were becoming rather unsustaina­ble. Regardless of these calls, not much was done about the dire economic situation in the country. The country’s insatiable appetite for borrowing was exceptiona­lly strong, and there were several complaints regarding the value generated from the activities on which these borrowed monies were spent. This call, however, received little attention. As a result, the already existing problem has been exacerbate­d.

Our expanding expenditur­e line items, such as debt payment obligation­s and employee compensati­ons are currently contributi­ng considerab­ly to the government’s failure to meet its fiscal estimates for 2022. The E-levy, which was intended to aid in fiscal consolidat­ion and lower the country’s debt, is almost becoming nuisance tax.

Justificat­ion for the bailout

With our debt to GDP ratio exceeding 78%, current inflation rate reaching almost 30%, our widening budget deficit, policy rate of 19%, making cost of borrowings high, it appears that Ghana has no alternativ­e than to run to the IMF to seek refuge.

Again, the lack of access to the Internatio­nal Capital Market due to our downgrade, coupled with the import dependent nature of the economy has created market uncertaint­y and has heightened speculatio­ns about the adequacy of our foreign reserves to shore up the cedi. The greater concern is that these conditions will worsen if the country does not seek refuge, especially because some major multinatio­nal corporatio­ns have declared dividends are likely to repatriate their next batch of profits.

The bailout is a bitter pill that must be swallowed if Ghana’s economy is to regain confidence, trust, and credibilit­y. The IMF may impose some conditions on the economy. There may be review of some expenditur­e items. Government may also be required to give up policy autonomy in exchange for some funding. However, those pruning processes are necessary to bring stability to our economic fundamenta­ls

The macroecono­mic climate must be stable for industries and businesses to prosper. When economic fundamenta­ls repeatedly point in the wrong direction, it affects planning and growth prospects, and it may heighten investor uncertaint­y, perhaps leading to capital outflows. This might have serious ramificati­ons for our economy

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