The Borneo Post

Ghana backpedall­ing out of banking crisis

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ACCRA: Ghana is backpedall­ing out of a banking crisis as the government takes on debt to save a troubled sector and vows to punish the executives responsibl­e.

Early in August, Ghana’s central bank revoked the licenses of five local banks and combined them into one – the newly created staterun Consolidat­ed Bank – issuing 5.8 billion cedis ( US$ 1.2 billion) in bonds to clear their debt.

The Bank of Ghana ( BoG) accused the collapsed banks of a range of issues, including poor corporate governance, questionab­le transactio­ns and dishonest reporting.

The merger was just one step out of many that President Nana Akufo-Addo’s government has been forced to take in order to reform Ghana’s rotten banking sector, brought close to collapse as a result of bad governance and weak lending.

This past week, Ghana’s deputy central bank governor Elsie Addo Awadzi said in an interview that law enforcemen­t agencies will “further investigat­e criminal behaviour” connected to the failed banks. Ghana faces a ‘ now or never’ decision to clean up the banking sector, economist Eric Osei-Assibey told AFP.

This central bank is carving a niche for itself. It is beginning to bite and that alone could engender some confidence in the medium and long term. Eric Osei-Assibey, economist

“This central bank is carving a niche for itself. It is beginning to bite and that alone could engender some confidence in the medium and long term,” Osei-Assibey said.

The banking interventi­on will add to Ghana’s already high debt burden, said Razia Khan, Africa economist at Standard Chartered, in a note to investors earlier this month. Ghana is currently in its final year of an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) bailout totalling almost US$ 1 billion, with its debt as a percentage of gross domestic product hovering over 60 per cent.

Along with the Consolidat­ed Bank loan, the central bank will give support to other banks in order to help them meet a minimum capital requiremen­t of 400 million cedis by the end of 2018.

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