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Cedi depreciation remains key concern for businesses

February 5, 2018
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Business owners in Accra have identified the cedi’s depreciation as their major challenge and want the government to stem the situation.

They contend that the development continues to impact their operations adversely hence require a solution to the perennial issue.

The comments come three days ahead of the  President Akufo Addo’s state of the nation address to Parliament on Thursday, February 8, 2018.

“If I’m rating the President, I’ll give him 40% because he is doing some good things. But for us especially the travel and tours industry, because I deal with the Abossey Okai spare parts dealers, the volatile exchange rate regime really affects my business. If they can’t travel to bring in goods then I lose money,” one business woman stressed.

Another stated, “Before Nana Akufo Addo came into office, the business was okay and people were buying a lot of items from us. But now they don’t have the money to buy it and business has become very slow.”

Checks by Citi Business News also indicate that the government would have to do more in order to meet its main economic targets for this year.

The government was unable to meet some targets projected for the first year in office.

For 2017, government targeted to rake in an estimated 44.9 billion cedis and spend about 58 billion cedis.

But official figures from the Ministry of Finance indicate that as at September last year, government has spent 36 billion cedis on areas such as wages and salary, capital expenditure on roads and other infrastructure, among others.

Revenue accrued stood at 28.4 billion cedis as at September last year.

This comprised tax revenue of about 22 billion cedis and non tax revenue of about 3.8 billion cedis.

Meanwhile inflation ended last year at 11.8 percent, up from the government’s projected 11.2 percent.

It may however suggest that the government’s projected economic growth target of 6.3 percent could be achieved as figures from the Ghana Statistical Service show that the economy has grown by about 7 percent as at September last year.

Even though the cedi has witnessed marginal stability against the dollar, it depreciated by 3.4 percent to the dollar on the average in 2017.

On the country’s debt, the total debt stock hit 139 billion cedis as of November 2017; representing 69 percent of GDP.

–

By: Pius Amihere Eduku & Bobbie Osei/citibusinessnews.com/Ghana

Tags: Cedi Depreciation
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