Business News of Friday, 4 January 2019

Source: peacefmonline.com

Make full disclosure on status of new Minimum Capital Requirement - Financial Consultant to BoG

Ernest Addison, BoG boss Ernest Addison, BoG boss

A Financial and Management Consultant, Mr. Raymond Tandoh is asking the Bank of Ghana to make full disclosure on status of the new minimum capital requirement as set up by the Central Bank of Ghana.

He says knowledge of this will make the good people of Ghana make informed decisions as to which banks they are to do businesses with given the fact that many have had their investments lost as a result of the recent ugly phenomenon of banks collapsing.

It will be recalled that on September 11, 2017, the Central Bank announced an upward adjustment of four hundred million cedis (400, 000,000) as the latest minimum capital for both new and existing banks in the country.

The final deadline for the meeting of this requirement was December 31, 2018.

In a statement copied to Peacefmonline.com, he disclosed that following the promulgation of the Banking Law 1989 (PNDCL 225), the issue of minimum capital came to the front burner.

Subsequently in 2003, seven million (7,000,000) cedis was fixed by the Central Bank as minimum capital. This was to strengthen the capital base of banks.

However, in 2008, it was adjusted to sixty million (60,000,000) cedis to make banks more resilient against unforeseen losses.

Then in 2013, the minimum capital requirement was further adjusted to one hundred million (100,000,000) cedis and later further got adjusted to one hundred and twenty million (120,000,000) cedis before it was finally adjusted to the current four hundred million (400, 000,000) cedis.

So as the deadline expires today, January 3, 2019, Ghanaians are in the dark as to the status of the new capital requirement.

"I am pleading with the Bank of Ghana as a matter of urgency immediately furnish the public with true and honest information as regards banks that have met the requirement and those that have not and the way forward. This is to keep at bay any further predicaments of the unsuspecting citizens as a result of doing businesses with questionable banks," he said.

Copy Of The Full Statement

MAKE FULL DISCLOSURE ON STATUS OF NEW MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENT


The deadline for both new and existing banks operating in Ghana to meet the new minimum capital requirement as set up by the Central Bank of Ghana has since expired. As citizens who are supposed to be active ones and not spectators, we call on the regulator of all financial institutions in Ghana to make a full disclosure to its citizens whom sovereignty resides about banks that have met the requirement and those that have not met it and the way forward.

This information is crucial especially at a time that the financial sector is seriously melting down and confidence levels have taken a nosedive. Knowledge of this will make the good people of Ghana make informed decisions as to which banks they are to do businesses with given the fact that many have had their investments lost as a result of the recent ugly phenomenon of banks collapsing.

It will be recalled that on September 11, 2017, the Central Bank announced an upward adjustment of four hundred million cedis (400, 000,000) as the latest minimum capital for both new and existing banks in the country. The final deadline for the meeting of this requirement was December 31, 2018.

Ghana's minimum capital conversation currently on the radar has a history. Following the promulgation of the Banking Law 1989 (PNDCL 225), the issue of minimum capital came to the front burner. Subsequently in 2003, seven million (7,000,000) cedis was fixed by the Central Bank as minimum capital. This was to strengthen the capital base of banks. In 2008, it was adjusted to sixty million (60,000,000) cedis to make banks more resilient against unforeseen losses. Then in 2013, the minimum capital requirement was further adjusted to one hundred million (100,000,000) cedis and later further got adjusted to one hundred and twenty million (120,000,000) cedis before it was finally adjusted to the current four hundred million (400, 000,000) cedis.

Today is January 3, 2019. The deadline has expired with three days and yet Ghanaians are in the dark as to the status of the new capital requirement.

As a matter of urgency and importance, the Bank of Ghana is hereby requested to immediately furnish the public with true and honest information as regards banks that have met the requirement and those that have not and the way forward. This is to keep at bay any further predicaments of the unsuspecting citizens as a result of doing businesses with questionable banks.

RAYMOND TANDOH

Financial and Management Consultant