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Home Business Banking & Finance

GHS 22.04bn net claims on Gov’t, not newly printed money – BoG reacts to allegations

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GHS 22.04bn net claims on Gov’t, not newly printed money – BoG reacts to allegations

The Central Bank has reacted to allegations by the Ranking Member of the Finance Committee, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson, over its role in printing some GHS 22.04bn to support government’s 2022 budget.

The Central Bank in statement issued on Tuesday, July 26, 2022, denied the allegations asserting the said amount were net claims on government and not new money printed to support the 2022 budget.

Setting the records straight in the press statement, the Central Bank noted the GHS 22.04bn compared four components being:

  • GoG Stocks and bonds sold by commercial banks to Bank of Ghana under repurchase agreements, by which banks routinely manage their liquidity positions;
  • IMF SDR allocation disbursed to Government through Bank of Ghana;
  • Draw-down of Government’s own deposits held with Bank of Ghana;
  • Negative balance on Government’s account with Bank of Ghana at a point in time, and self liquidated as new Government deposits are credited to the account.

“In Appendix 2A of the Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review document, under financing, out of the total financing of GHS 28.12 billion, an amount of GHS 22.04 billion was captured under BoG. This is the amount being referred to by the Ranking Member as BoG’s printing of currency to support the budget”.

“First, there is an amount of ¢1.6 billion which reflects GoG Stocks and bonds sold by commercial banks to Bank of Ghana under repurchase agreements. These bonds, held by a commercial bank since 2021 were purchased by Bank of Ghana to provide liquidity to the bank, under a repurchase agreement that required the bank to buy back these bonds at a later date”.

“Having purchased these bonds on the secondary market as a secondary transaction, Bank of Ghana’s holdings of GoG bonds increased by ¢1.6 billion, not because it had lent money to Government, but because it had purchased a GoG bond originally purchased by the bank for investment purposes. As part of its function of providing liquidity to the banking sector, Bank of Ghana routinely enters into similar agreements (Repos and Reverse Repos) with commercial banks that hold Government bonds and require liquidity to meet short-term obligations. These arrangements do not represent lending to Government by Bank of Ghana”, the apex bank explained.

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“The proceeds of bonds purchased from banks, go to those banks and not to Government. Once Bank of Ghana purchases such bonds from banks, it holds them until maturity of the bonds, unless they are repurchased by the banks”, it added.

Second, the Bank of Ghana said ¢6.2 billion of the amount reflects on-lending of IMF SDR resources to government, in line with the overall objective of the special SDR operation by the IMF, adding “IMF resources are usually meant for Balance of Payments support, and it goes directly to the central banks”.

However, in this particular instance, it said, the special SDR allocation by the IMF was designed to provide budget support to countries to help address issues related to the Covid-19 pandemic, adding “last year, Bank of Ghana received additional SDR allocation of SDR 707.3 million ($1.001 billion). In line with the broader objectives of the special SDR allocations, the Bank of Ghana on-lent the additional resources to the government. This was approved by Parliament in the 2022 Budget presentation. The amount of SDRs so far extended to the budget amounts to 6.2 billion”.

“In addition, an amount of 2.85 billion reflects a drawdown on government’s own deposits held with the Bank of Ghana. These include statutory funds such as the GET FUND, National Health insurance, District Assembly Common Fund and the Sinking Fund. Also included are donor-related funds as well as the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) operational accounts with Bank of Ghana”.

Furthermore, it pointed out that “the residual amount of 11.4 billion included in the 22.04 billion, represents an overdrawn balance on the Government’s treasury main account held with Bank of Ghana as of the reporting date. Overdrafts of this nature occur from time to time, as the auction system has been designed to ensure same day settlement of maturities and interest payments, once the auction is concluded. This guarantee of same-day settlement of maturities and interest payments, which has always been part of the auction system, has underpinned the development of the local currency bond market. With such a guarantee, on occasions when there have been uncovered auctions, maturities are automatically settled and then a reconciliation is done with Government”

Again, it stated that “incoming government cash deposits are then used automatically to liquidate such overdrawn balances on a rolling and continuous basis. The current gap of GHC11.4 billion reflects the net amount of the gap at the end of June 2022. This balance is cleared regularly. Any outstanding balance has to be cleared by the end of the year.”

Read details of the statement:

Press Release – Response to Claims of BOG Printing Money – July 26th 2022 by Fuaad Dodoo on Scribd

Tags: Bank of Ghana (BoG)COVID-19 pandemicGHS 22.04bn net claims on Gov’tIMFnot newly printed money – BoG reacts to allegations
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