Ghana Head to IMF By Close of The Year
These conditions come in because of some money the nation would need to solve the pending challenges that necessitate the request from the IMF.
An Economist at the University of Cape Coast Department of Economics, Dr. William Godfred Cantah says Ghana is likely to go to the IMF probably by the end of this year or early next year 2022.
“Currently if you look at the way our debt to GDP is going, and for the fact that for the past three years we have had a continuous reduction in revenue mobilization, then there is that possibility that we will have no choice than to go back to the IMF,” he told journalists in Accra during an event organized by Economic Governance Platform at the Coconut Grove Regency Hotel in Accra yesterday.
The event with the support from OXFAM-Ghana was under the theme “Assessment of the Ghanaian Economy 2012 – 2020” brought together Civil Society Organizations, the Australia Embassy in Ghana, Non-Governmental Organizations, and the media for the discussion.
Dr. Godfred Cantah says government will definitely have to the IMF unless the government increases its revenue mobilization and close up the revenue gap, “we will have no choice than to go the IMF.”
To avoid going to the IMF, the Economist suggested “closing up the tax leakages that exist in the economy, and then roping in more people into the tax net and getting the informal sector to pay tax, these are the things we need to consider to doing.”
Touching on the issue of graduate unemployment, Dr. Catanh stated that until the government invests in a sector that has the capacity to employ them, “we will continue having the situation of graduate unemployment until we start supporting our SME’s to expand to absolve them.”
“Another key issue has to do with the continued production of managers rather than producers. Our tertiary institution produces more people from the humanities more than from the people who are from the apply science and the technology sector.
So you end up producing people who cannot produce anything but hope that somebody produces for them to manage.
And so far as you don’t have people who can produce for you to manage, then you will end up not getting people employed. So until we tackle unemployed graduates from the root it will continue to be a challenge in this country,” he added.
The Economist also disclosed that one of the easiest ways to get the country formalized is by helping SMEs to grow big.
“If they grow, they have no choice than to undertake a number of things that these big companies do,” Dr Catanh stated.