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Today in History: Reduce public debt stock to sustainable levels by 2024 – ISSER urges government

25355239 Prof Peter Quartey is the Director of ISSER

Tue, 8 Nov 2022 Source: www.ghanaweb.com

In 2021, the Institute of Statistical, Social, and Economic Research (ISSER) called on the government to reduce public debt in order to achieve sustainable levels by 2024.

ISSER said, "crude oil prices have surged and above $70 per barrel with serious implications on transport fares, cost of production, prices of goods and services, and livelihoods."

It urged the government to take steps to minimize the effects on the economy, especially the livelihood of the poor.

Read the full story originally published on November 8, 2021, by ghanaiantimes

The Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER) is charging the government to reduce the public debt stock to sustainable levels by 2024 through a prudent debt management strategy.

In its State of the Ghanaian Economy Report and Review of 2021 3rd Quarter Economic Performance, the research and economic think tank said debt service payments accounted for 62.1 percent of domestic revenue in 2020 (51.9 percent in 2019) and therefore require drastic action to bring the debt levels down.

In the second quarter of 2021, Interest payments accounted for about 45 percent of total tax revenue. This ISSER said limits the fiscal space, thereby affecting capital expenditure/Investments needed to stimulate further growth.

Furthermore, it also urged the government to increase support to businesses affected by the COVID-19 pandemic to help accelerate the recovery process.

It pointed out that the negative impact of the pandemic on businesses despite the various intervention programmes instituted by the government indicates that government must do more to aid recovery in the economy.

On other recommendations, ISSER said, "crude oil prices have surged and above $70 per barrel with serious implications on transport fares, cost of production, prices of goods and services and livelihoods". It, therefore, urged the government to take steps to minimize the effects on the economy especially the livelihood of the poor."

ISSER recommended that since the COVID-19 Health Levy and the Financial Sector clean-up Levy seem to be performing better than the others, a critical assessment of these taxes is needed to ascertain whether they are efficient means of raising revenue rather than a "nuisance" tax that stifles private businesses.

Ghana recorded appreciable growth rates since 2020 with an oil Gross Domestic Product of 3.9 percent and non-oil GDP growth of 5.2 percent recorded in the second quarter of 2021.

Although the country is among the fastest-growing economies, ISSER said higher growth in labor-intensive sectors such as agriculture and manufacturing with high-value addition is very critical in order to avoid the jobless growth syndrome.

Source: www.ghanaweb.com
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