Country

News

Sports

Business

Entertainment

GhanaWeb TV

Africa

Opinions

Menu
Country

Ghana’s trade balance records US$936.4m – BoG

Bog 22 Bank of Ghana

Fri, 15 May 2020 Source: classfmonline.com

The Bank of Ghana has said “notwithstanding the unfavourable global developments”, the performance of the country’s external sector has been “strong in the first quarter of 2020, reflecting in a higher trade surplus and higher capital inflows”.

Announcing the maintenance of the policy rate at 14.5 per cent at the central bank’s monetary policy committee meeting on Friday, 15 May 2020, the Governor, Dr Ernest Addison, said: “The trade balance recorded a surplus of US$936.4 million (1.4% of GDP) compared with a surplus of US$642.4 million (1.0% of GDP) recorded for the same period in 2019”.

“This outturn”, he explained, “was on account of lower imports and a marginal fall in export receipts”.

According to him, “The lower oil imports value is primarily as a result of a switch in the energy generation mix in favour of domestically produced gas”.

He said demand for non-oil imports also dropped in line with the slowdown in economic activity.

The government of Ghana’s decision to access the Eurobond market earlier in the year, and the Rapid Credit Facility (RCF) financing from the IMF, Dr Addison noted, “resulted in a build-up in reserves of US$1.5 billion (2.2% of GDP)”.

“Gross International Reserves, therefore, increased from a level of US$8.4 billion at the end of December 2019 to US$10.3 billion at the end of April 2020, sufficient to provide 4.8 months of imports cover.

“This strong reserve position has helped to ensure stability in the foreign exchange market even as external financing conditions tighten and emerging and frontier economies see capital flow reversals as a result of the heightened global uncertainty”, adding: “To further boost foreign exchange liquidity, the Bank of Ghana (BOG) has concluded a US$1 billion Repurchase Agreement (Repo) facility with the U.S. Federal Reserve under its Repo facility for Foreign and International Monetary Authorities (FIMA Repo Facility)”.

“This facility is expected to be available for at least six months, provides an important foreign exchange buffer to boost dollar liquidity amid the COVID-19 global pandemic, and will further enhance the BOG’s dollar liquidity”, Dr Addison noted.

Source: classfmonline.com
Related Articles: