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Ghana hasn’t defaulted in its international debt payments, says Abena Osei-Asare

The minister of state-designate said the country's nominal debts now stood at GHC621 billion

Abena Osei-Asare, the Minister of State nominee at the Finance Ministry, says Ghana has not defaulted in the payment of its international debts.

During her vetting at the public sitting of the appointments committee of Parliament on Wednesday (14 March), she said Ghana’s nominal debts now stood at GHC621 billion, which included the Energy Sector Levy Act (ESLA) bond, Daakye bond and the Sinohydro loan.

Dr Cassiel Ato Baah Forson, the Minority Leader and Ranking Member of the appointments committee, asked the nominee that “currently, Ghana has defaulted in the payment of all external debts, all the debts that we owe to other countries – bilateral (excluding multilateral), banks and country to country. Is this the case?”

Osei-Asare: “Mr chairman, we haven’t defaulted on the payment of our eternal debts, we announced on the 19 December, 2022, that we wanted to do a debt restructuring and so, we are halting on … we did not wait to default but we rather announced.”

She said the government began and completed the domestic debt exchange and currently working on the external debts, hoping to make inroads and then go to the commercial.

“So, that is what we have done. It is not the same as debt default.”

Dumsor

Touching on the ongoing intermittent power supply (dumsor) in the country, Osei-Asare mentioned illegal meter connections as some of the contributory factors.

She urged Ghanaians to reframe from illegal connections and pay their electricity bills promptly to enable the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) to provide better services to them.

“Yes, it is a big issue in the energy space, but we also have to do our part, ECG loses about 30% of the investment of the power they produce. How does this come about? The illegal structures, illegal meters and everything, they are human beings who do these things,” she said.

“In as much as government is doing its part, we as citizens will also have to change our attitudes towards these things and that is the only way together, we can succeed and address these issues.”

“Whenever your payments for electricity are due you have to go ahead and pay. As citizens who love our country and want institutions to succeed, we also have to do our part to help our nation.”

Responding to a question on whether the government would reintroduce the road tolls, Osei-Asare answered in the negative.

Asked whether she was part of those in the government, who ordered the removal of the road toll on 18 November 2021, the nominee said the decision was a political one made by the government.

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Source
GNA
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