Tag: Trades Union Congress (TUC)

  • Cancellation of Africa’s external debt – Dr. Atuahene mounts opposition

    Cancellation of Africa’s external debt – Dr. Atuahene mounts opposition

    Some market analysts are cautioning against growing calls for the wholesale cancellation of Africa’s external debts, describing the proposal as economically unsustainable.

    Banking Consultant, Dr. Richmond Atuahene, argues that Africa’s persistent debt crisis stems more from weak capital investment and poor fiscal discipline than from the debt stock itself.

    He insists that a blanket write-off will do little to address the structural deficiencies undermining growth on the continent.

    “Let me put it bluntly: we (Africans) borrow and consume as against capital investment which will pay itself back. So, I disagree with that social mentality that those debts should be cancelled,” he asserted.

    His comments follow the August 29, 2025, rally in Accra, where the African Regional Organization of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC-Africa), in partnership with the Trades Union Congress (TUC-Ghana), pressed for debt cancellation, branding it an act of reparative justice.

    Overall Africa’s external debt has surpassed US$1.3 trillion at the end of 2024 with average national debt-to-GDP ratio risen above 60%, with countries like Ghana and Zambia forced into restructuring.

    Dr. Atuahene maintains that the continent’s priority should be strengthening fiscal discipline, boosting revenue mobilization, and aligning debt with productive investment to avoid recurrent crises.

    Ghana remains the fifth most-indebted African country to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as of August 2025, with outstanding credit estimated at SDR 2.70 billion, unchanged from July.

    Latest IMF data show Egypt topping the continent’s debtor list at SDR 7.18 billion, though marginally lower than the previous month. Côte d’Ivoire and Kenya followed in second and third place with exposures of SDR 3.10 billion and SDR 3.02 billion, respectively.

     

  • Draft report on review of Constitution to be ready by October – CRC

    Draft report on review of Constitution to be ready by October – CRC

    The Constitution Review Committee (CRC) says it is on track to deliver its draft report on the review of Ghana’s 1992 Constitution to President John Dramani Mahama within the next month.

    “We are working hard to finalise the draft report, and we expect to present it to the President by the end of September or early October,” the CRC’s Secretary, Dr Rainer Akumperigya, confirmed in an interview with Daily Graphic.

    The draft follows months of consultations with key stakeholders, including the Council of State and the Trades Union Congress (TUC).

    Issues raised during the process included limiting presidential terms, reducing the powers of the Presidency, electing MMDCEs, and revising the rule that ministers must be appointed from Parliament.

    Dr Akumperigya stressed that the submission of the report would not mark the end of the committee’s work, as it would still be required to provide clarifications to Parliament and support the implementation phase.