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World Bank report indicates Ghana’s arrears were 5% of GDP pre-COVID-19

A new World Bank report has revealed that Ghana had accumulated significant government arrears prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This is far higher than the projected arrears post-COVID-19.

The report, dubbed: “Finance for an Equitable Recovery”, indicates that the percentage of the country’s arrears was estimated at almost 5% of the country’s Gross Domestic Product.

This ranked the nation 16th in sub-Saharan Africa with the highest government arrears.

It confirms concerns by some economists and analysts that the country’s fiscal situation was deteriorating prior to COVID-19.

This was also heightened by the rising debt.

The report, however, urged governments, including Ghana’s, to mobilise new revenue to pay off debts incurred for the crisis response and preserve their ability to support the COVID-19 recovery, adding that the potential return to economic growth during the recovery will help.

“However, governments must also pursue complementary, longer-term structural policies to increase their revenue base. Most emerging economies, for example, lack the institutional capacity to tax incomes and instead rely primarily on taxing consumption”.

Scaling back the stimulus

The report said resource-constrained governments in the short term face the challenge of scaling back fiscal support to households and firms without dampening the recovery.

“In many countries, direct payments to households and firms have served as the main pillar of the crisis response and were designed to protect the livelihoods of economically disadvantaged groups—such as workers in the informal sector and those in unskilled occupations—and the survival of businesses in the sectors most severely affected by the crisis”.

However, it said, few countries have the resources to maintain these policies in the longer term, and in many cases countries will need to phase out support before economic activity has fully recovered.

Managing risks to financial stability

It also called for continued access to credit for households and businesses, saying, many households and businesses are at acute risk of losing access to formal credit as a result of the COVID-19 crisis.

“Such a loss could dampen the recovery because access to credit is an important insurance mechanism that strengthens the ability of households and firms to weather economic risks that might arise during an extended recovery”, it added.

Source: classfmonline.com

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