Business News of Tuesday, 21 April 2015

Source: cajnewsafrica.com

IMF bailout not enough to curb Cedi’s free-fall

The local currency - Cedi- decline cannot be stopped with the release of the $114 million first traunch of the International Monetary Fund's $918 million bailout to Ghana, Renowned economist, Dr Raziel Obeng-Okon has said

Obeng-Okon, a lecturer at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA), said the amount was not enough to stabilise the depreciating cedi.

He gave the warning during an interview with Itnewsghana in his office in Accra.

“I do not think the IMF’s first tranche of $114 million would be enough to shore up our reserves. This represents less than 13 percent of the total amount of $918 million expected in support of our medium-term economic reform programme,” he said.

He, however, thinks the government should focus on the total inflows from the IMF and its attendant expected donor inflows of about $1,25 billion yielding total expected inflows of over $2,16 billion by the end of 2015.

The government recently announced that the IMF had finally approved a credit facility of $918 million, which will be released in tranches from 2015 to 2017 to help stabilise the Ghanaian economy.

The first tranche of $114 million last week hit the account of the Bank of Ghana to shore up its reserves. Subsequently, there will be a review process of the first tranche normally within six months.

The cedi which traded at Ghc3,8236 to the US Dollar on Monday is yet to make gains since the arrival of the IMF’s first tranche which some analysts and economist call “the IMF medicine.”