2021 budget – Adomonline.com http://34.58.148.58 Your comprehensive news portal Fri, 12 Mar 2021 13:32:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 http://34.58.148.58/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-Adomonline140-32x32.png 2021 budget – Adomonline.com http://34.58.148.58 32 32 2021 Budget will be a tough one – Seth Tekper http://34.58.148.58/2021-budget-will-be-a-tough-one-seth-tekper/ Fri, 12 Mar 2021 13:32:05 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1932126 Former Finance Minister, Seth Tekper, is urging Ghanaians to brace themselves for a tough time this year as the 2021 Budget and Economic Policy will be extremely conservative.

According to him, the fiscal economic numbers do not look good, requiring very drastic measures to save the economy from further troubles.

The school of thought is that a trouble or poor fiscal economy will impact negatively on the monetary and real sector economies that is exchange rate instability, increase inflation or pricing, increase cost of credit, relatively low income for businesses, amongst others.

Although the nation hasn’t gotten to the level of severe economic contraction, Mr. Tekper said the present economic situation will require pragmatism from government in this year’s budget.

“It’s a tough budget, no question about it and the numbers [fiscal economic indicators] speak for themselves, and some of the alternative numbers [from IMF, Moody’s and Fitch] shows that.

You have institutions like IMF, Moody showing what we call parallel number; so to give you an example, debt is at 80% – we shouldn’t be comfortable with 80% – and I’ve said that we shouldn’t be comparing ourselves with the developed country”, he said in a video ahead of the 2021 Budget presentation on 12th March 2021.

“They [developed countries] are borrowing at almost negative rates – 1%, 2%, at most 4%.

We do our borrowing not even at 6% but 8%, so the cost of borrowing is high and it takes a lot of money to service these debts as a developing country, so debt at that level is unsustainable”, he further said.

“Ghana has been described as being at risk of debt distress. It is also not a sufficient comfort that the deficit which the government itself–if you take three of their documents– originally said the 2020 deficit was going to be 4.5 or 4.7%.

By the time the mid-year review was being read has risen to 8.5%, but if you add the energy costs which was taken out of the narrow basis if you add it gives government own deficit to 11% plus”, he emphasized.

He expressed worry that the higher fiscal deficit to Gross Domestic Product is being attributed to covid-19 pandemic, saying it is not true.

“Now there is some effort to attribute to most of them [higher fiscal deficit and rising debt] to covid-19.

“But we have had the occasion to go to the IMF to get money for covid, and we have told the IMF that the cost of borrowing [covid-19 deficit] is between 2.3 to 2.5 percent.

“So even if you added the cost of covid to 4.5%, you are having about 7%. So if your deficit is around 13% and Fitch and others have said it could be 15% or more, what is accounting for the gap”, he questioned.

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The adjustment in cost made in the mid-year review budget were the energy arrears, bailout cost, additional money for interest payment and additional payment for wage arrears.

Mr Tekper said “as we speak government has not even finished negotiating with labour which means that whatever is in the advance of appropriation will be conservative.

And so if you take the last indicator which is suggesting that government could do 2021 deficit [fiscal] of 8.5% which is a comedown of 15% to 8.5% is not possible”.

“We have done IMF programmes under austere conditions and we have never reduce the deficit by that number, we have never done that.

So it tells you that the projection government was presented in the advance of appropriation was very conservative”, he emphasized.

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Osei-Kyei Mensa-Bonsu presents 2021 budget http://34.58.148.58/osei-kyei-mensa-bonsu-presents-2021-budget/ Fri, 12 Mar 2021 13:06:10 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1932084 The Minister for Parliamentary Affairs, Osei-Kyei Mensah-Bonsu is today, March 12, 2021, presenting the budget statement of the Akufo-Addo government.

It follows the inability of Finance Minister-Designate, Ken Ofori-Atta, to return to Ghana on time from his medical leave.

The budget is expected to chart a clear path for the country towards post-C0VID-19 economic recovery.

Cabinet, on March 8 ahead of the budget, approved a blueprint expected to put Ghana’s economy back on track in the post-pandemic era.

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In the blueprint, known as the Post COVID-19 Economic Recovery Programme, it is the priority of the Akufo-Addo-led government to pursue policies and programmes that will build a robust economy and create more jobs.

Meanwhile, Mr Mensah-Bonsu, who is also the Member of Parliament for Suame, has been appointed as the caretaker Minister for the Finance Ministry.

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