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Bank of Ghana didn’t pump money into the economy to stabilize cedi, Vice President Dr Bawumia says

Ghana’s Vice President, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has disclosed that the Bank of Ghana did not inject $800m into the country’s international reserves in order to stabilize the cedi at the time it was sharply depreciated against its major trading currencies in March 2019.

Dr Mahamudu Bawumia

Dr Bawumia, who is also the chairman of the government’s Economic Management Team said that the “market corrected itself.”

He said this while addressing a town hall meeting organized by the government to address economic issues in the country.

His comment is coming after reports suggested that the BoG injected some funds to save the cedi which was struggling against other currencies.

At the time, the cedi had depreciated to about GH¢5.8 to a dollar but within a week, it appreciated to be traded at nearly GH¢5 to a dollar.

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A Daily Graphic publication on March 5, 2019 quoted the Head of Financial Markets at the central bank, Steven Opata, as saying that the accumulation of more dollars through the $800 injection would help increase the net international reserve (NIR) to around $4 billion, enough to provide confidence in the system and help stabilise the free fall of the local currency.

“Contrary to some speculation, the Bank of Ghana did not spend any reserves to revive the cedi following the initial depreciation. Some people have misunderstood the requirement by the IMF for the Bank of Ghana to build up its reserves by some $800 million to mean that the Bank of Ghana used that money to reverse the depreciation of the cedi. The reason for the sudden reversal in the sharp depreciation that we observed was that the market corrected itself,” Bawumia said.

He, however, explained, however, that the government was expected to maintain a certain level of net international reserves as part of the actions for the country’s completion of the IMF program.

“The most important reason and the proximate cause of the recent depreciation is the time inconsistency of an IMF prior action on reserves target. At the end of January, As part of the 7 prior actions to complete the IMF program which went to the Board on March 20, 2019, the Bank of Ghana was required to ensure net international reserves (NIR) target on March 14, 2019, are the same levels as it was at the end of December 2018].”

“To meet the IMF program prior action, the Bank of Ghana had to rather build up (increase) reserves in a period of extreme demand pressures by some $800 million and had no room to intervene in the foreign exchange market in line with approved intervention policy. This partly explains why the Ghana cedi came under significant pressure during this period which was exacerbated by speculation,” he added.

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