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General News of Saturday, 9 July 2022

    

Source: www.ghanaweb.live

Ghana’s inflation at a terrible 50%/year – Renowned US economist

Steve H. Hanke is an economist Steve H. Hanke is an economist

Steve H. Hanke says Ghana's inflation rate is terrible

Ghana seeks bailout from IMF

Government insists IMF U-turn isn't because of economic mismanagement


Steve H. Hanke, a professor of applied economics at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland has pegged Ghana’s inflation rate at 50%/yr, describing the status as terrible.

The 79-year-old economist, Saturday,

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The economist, prior to this, opined that Ghana’s decision to seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will not save the economy. In a July 2 tweet, Steve Hanke questioned Ghana’s last-ditch effort to save the economy which is in distress and saddled with a huge debt burden.

“Today, I measure inflation in Ghana at a stunning 49.35%/yr. In a last-ditch effort, the government has begun negotiations with the IMF on a bailout deal. SPOILER ALERT: Another IMF loan won't save Ghana’s economy. Like its past 17 IMF programs, a new one will fail.”

His IMF assertion was however contradicted by Joe Jackson, Chief Operations Officer at Dalex Finance. The Ghanaian financial analyst responding to Hanke’s tweet said: “I disagree with Steve Hanke. IMF programs have largely worked in Ghana. The problem has been the return to bad old habits when the program ends. ‘Don't blame the heart surgery. You returned to a junk food diet as soon as you were out of hospital."



After years of berating the John Mahama government for seeking a bailout from IMF and vowing never to do same, President Akufo-Addo and his government despite touting confidence in home-grown solutions and their unapparelled ability to manage the economy made a U-turn on July 1, 2022.

The president authorized Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta to commence formal engagements with IMF to support the country’s economy. Although the government acknowledged the worsening economic condition, it has insisted that, unlike John Mahama who mismanaged the economy, there is a global crisis – a reason for backtracking.

“The domestic programme which would have enabled us to deal with it has had its own challenges. The president has asked that we open the IMF window and start engagement with the fund. Let’s give ourselves the opportunity to go through it,” Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah argued on the Citi Breakfast Show.

BB/WA