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Can Ghana & IMF Turn Around Africa’s Worst Currency

Can Ghana & IMF Turn Around Africa’s Worst Currency

From Bloomberg

Ghana’s Finance Ministry will start talks with the International Monetary Fund as early as next week with support from the lender aimed at stemming a slide in Africa’s worst-performing currency this year.

A deal on technical support and possible financial aid may be reached by November, Deputy Finance Minister Mona Quartey said in an interview in London today. The world’s second-biggest cocoa producer may consider moving short-term debt to issuances with longer maturities to bring down borrowing costs, she said.

“The IMF’s view and focus will be on the balance of payments,” Quartey said. “That will help stabilize the currency further and once the currency is stabilized a lot of the other issues start to fall away.”

Government spending including civil-servant pay increases and lower revenue from key exports such as gold and tax earnings weighed on Ghana’s fiscal deficit, which was forecast in July to reach 8.8 percent of gross domestic product this year from an earlier target of 8.5 percent. The cedi has slumped 37 percent this year, pushing inflation to 15.3 percent in July. Investors are demanding yields near a five-year high to hold the country’s benchmark Treasury bills.

 

Written by Lyubov Pronina and Neo Khanyile /Read more at Bloomberg