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    Home » Economists upbeat about Ghana’s economy post COVID-19 and 2020 elections
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    Economists upbeat about Ghana’s economy post COVID-19 and 2020 elections

    Adnan AdamsBy Adnan AdamsJanuary 9, 2021No Comments4 Views
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     Adnan Adams Mohammed

    Some renowned economists and financial journalist have shared their outlook and resentments on the Ghanaian economy backed by reliable data and facts.

    They analyzed the post-COVID-19 and post 2020 elections challenge of the Ghanaian economy and proffered some solutions.

    According to a Chartered Economist, Ghana’s economy can fully recover from the effect of COVID-19 after three years. He, however, clarified that, the period anticipated for Ghana’s economy depends on what we do now as the period can extend if the right measures are not put in place.

    “The impact of COVID-19 has not been little. The recovery will be U-shape. We will crawl before we rise. It will take us some time to recover. When it comes to the full bounce back of Ghana’s recovery, I don’t anticipate less than 3 years”, Emmanuel Amoah Darkwa has said in a radio interview last week. Adding that, “Our recovery however, depends on what we do now. That can tell if it will be faster than expected or slower than expected.”

    The President, Nana Akufo-Addo, in his last State of the Nation Address last week in Parliament to end his first four-year term admitted that; “the global pandemic of COVID-19 threatened to derail all the progress chalked in the first three years of my [his] administration. Its impact has led to the revision of GDP growth for 2020 from 6.8% to 0.9% and later to 1.9%.”

    But said that the Government has been “able to stabilise the economy, exited satisfactorily from the IMF program and restored confidence in the economy”.

    Consequently, Toma Imirhe, a renowned financial journalist in his recent publication put it that, “President Nana Akufo-Addo will start his final four-year tenure on January 7 with his task on the economy well cut out for him.

    In his analysis, Mr Imirhe indicated that, the years ahead provides “a tough ride for a President whose legitimacy is being questioned at the Supreme Court and faced with a hung Parliament, the current economic situation is the result of a combination of factors, including a laxed fiscal stance that emerged around 2019, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on public finances and the fiscal pressures from the December 2020 general elections.”

    “He, [President Nana Akufo-Addo] will be expected to lead the revival of an economy that has been pushed into its first recession in almost 40 years, prune down public spending to contain a large fiscal deficit and rein in borrowing to address a debt overhang that has breached various sustainability thresholds.

    Already, some economists have acknowledged that, the challenges have dampened growth prospects. The growth rate has been cut from 6.3 percent to 0.9 percent and the economy has contracted on two consecutive quarters, which has pushed the fiscal deficit from an earlier estimate of 4.7 percent of GDP to 11.4 percent of GDP and elevated debt levels to GH¢273.8 billion in September last year, equivalent to 71 percent of GDP.

    A research fellow with the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), Dr Said Boakyehas said the fiscal deficit for the year 2020 would breach the 11.4 percent of GDP target and posited that “the obvious thing to do is to consolidate”.

    “If you do such a thing; if you post such a high deficit figure, then you have to consolidate going forward; if not, the economy will crash and that is what I expect the 2021 budget to do,” he said.

    A bridge budget that will lapse in March this year was about 80 percent dependent on borrowing and Dr Boakye, who is the Head of Research at the institute, said such a trend must not be allowed to continue in this year’s budget.

    He said the budget must be creatively crafted to depend on more revenues and less on borrowings to help lessen the impact of debts on the deficit, refinancing and other already breached thresholds.

    He advised against “rushing to implement election campaign promises”, explaining that only growth enhancing and social protection expenditures must be prioritised in the short to medium term.

    “They should properly assess the economic situation devoid of politics and let the citizens know the real situation,” he said, explaining that the populace needed to be carried along on the fiscal consolidation exercise.

    But, Prof. Peter Quartey in his recent comment noted that, the consolidation must be gradual and with due regard to the need to protect the economically vulnerable against the impact of the pandemic.

     

    “There needs to be priority on revitalising the economy while seeking to stabilise it. The consolidation must not be immediate and steep; it must be staggered,” the Economics Professor at the Institute for Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER) of the University of Ghana intimated.

     

    According to him, a fiscal consolidation exercise that was immediate and steep would expose the less economically empowered to more pains that could create social challenges.

     

    He mentioned that the COVID-19 Revitalisation of Enterprises Support (CARES) programme, the Ghana Incentive-based Risk Sharing Agricultural (GIRSAL) and the stimulus packages being administered by the National Board for Small-Scale Industries (NBSSI) as initiatives that should be prioritised to help revitalise businesses.

     

    He also called for targeted support schemes for viable businesses, using them as anchors to revive domestic production and the economy as a whole.

     

    Beyond the need to rein in expenditures and revitalise the economy, Dr Boakye and Prof. Quartey also called for the need to boost domestic revenue collections to help reduce the pressure on borrowing.

     

    They called for compliance, plugging of leakages and proper audits to ensure that the state collected all revenues due it.

     

    They, however, ruled out the introduction of new taxes, explaining that the economy in its current state required subsidies to grow.

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