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Ghana using almost 100% tax revenue to pay salaries and interests on debt, according to IMF

The International Monetary Fund has disclosed that almost 100 percent of Ghana’s tax revenue goes into the payment of salaries for civil and public servants.

Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta

The revenue is as well as used for interest payments on debts.

The Bretton Wood institution also insists the government of Ghana is over borrowing while tax revenue is below expectations.

This, according to the IMF, is what has brought Ghana to the brink of becoming a highly debt-distressed country.

The implications of being a highly debt-distressed country include higher cost of credit and a lack of fiscal space to finance capital projects among others.

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Speaking at the Stanbic Bank/Graphic Business Breakfast meeting on Tuesday, February 182020, the IMF Country Director for Ghana, Dr. Albert Touna Mama, said Ghana’s fiscal space keeps narrowing because of over borrowing, a situation that he describes as worrying.

“It’s a common misconception to think that that fiscal space is revenue and how much revenue that you can raise; I think that is a first I want to put out there…. Revenue, obviously is so much important and I will come to that. Fiscal space is bigger than that. And, in fact, borrowing or the capacity the government has to borrow is also part of fiscal space.”

Adding that “Borrowing for government is completely normal, overborrowing is what is an issue for a country in general.”

Mr Touna Mama said, “When you look at the situation for Ghana over the last few years, and when you look at what it is today, and you think about the fact that almost 100% of tax revenue goes between compensation for employees and interest payments…think about it; almost 100% of tax revenue paying civil servants and paying back on the debt the government incurred.

“By this measure of fiscal space, if you were thinking about tax revenue, there is no space to do anything about development. But when we look at the last few years, I think it’s fair to say that we have seen an increase in spending by the fact of you looking at the tax revenue, the fiscal space is quite narrow,” he noted.

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The IMF Country Director quizzed that “The question is: how was the government able to increase fiscal space despite the fact that it has a very narrow tax base. The key here, in my view, is that there is a virtuous cycle by which when you do the proper fiscal consolidation, when you have credit policies including the programme that we have with Ghana, you are able to craft some space to finance some spending.”

“Don’t get me wrong…right, as an IMF, we are unequivocal in the fact that the way to improve fiscal space in Ghana is about improving domestic revenue mobilisation and not borrowing, and, so, I want that to be our basis.”

He further outlined three ways to improve domestic tax revenue, which are; by improving tax administration, by improving tax compliance and by improving tax exemption.

World Bank warns Ghana over excessive borrowing

Recently, the World Bank cautioned Ghana against excessive borrowing as the total debt stock of the country hit GH¢214.9 billion.

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"At the moment, Ghana is in the situation that World Bank describes as moderate-high risk of debt distress, so, of course, the country needs to be careful and the country is at the stage where things are critical. I am confident that the Finance Minister and his team are fully aware of that and some borrowing, which not totally a bad thing, but you have to borrow on the right terms”, the Country Director Frank Laporte said.

Interest payments on loans will cost the nation GH¢22 billion this year. The nation is, however, targeting GH¢67.07 billion as total revenue and grants for this year.

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