Business News of Wednesday, 30 March 2022
Source: www.ghanaweb.live
2022-03-30FLASHBACK: Cedi gains won’t last – Economist
Cedi depreciates against the dollar
Economist John Gatsi intimated that the cedi's stability against the dollar will be a short lived feat.
The dollar was selling at GH¢4.30 at the time.
According to him, pumping some dollars into the economy to deal with the cedi's depreciation is only a short term measure that will “be yielding some fruits, but we do not expect that
Read full articlethis would last because the cedi itself is a depreciating currency and will continue to go through that cycle”.
Read the full story originally published on March 30,2017 by Classfm
The gains made by the Ghanaian cedi against other major foreign currencies in the past weeks are not sustainable, economist John Gatsi has stated.
Currently, US$1 sells for GHS 4.3 on the interbank market.
Dr Gatsi said the action of the Bank of Ghana (BoG) to pump some US$120 million into circulation within the short term to prop up the currency could “be yielding some fruits, but we do not expect that this would last because the cedi itself is a depreciating currency and will continue to go through that cycle”.
For him, the country has not worked towards keeping the cedi more predictable within a stable zone so “this (appreciation) is just one of the cycles being repeated”.
According to him, the country must find “medium to long term solutions to addressing the fluctuation of the cedi which should be the focus of the managers of the economy”.
He suggested the moderation of imported goods, diversification of export base and export destination to more effectively arrest the cedi’s slide. He was very concerned about expansion of production, adding that “these are the things that we need to strategise so that it brings benefits to the country in the medium to long term”.
He said the government of Ghana must provide incentives which will motivate people to alter their consumption patterns and reduce the taste for imported foreign goods.