Ghana secured a staff-level agreement through the International Monetary Fund in December for a $3 billion bailout loan, but must first ask bilateral lenders to provide financing assurances on existing debts before the IMF board can sign off on the programme. Addison said on Monday that negotiations with those lenders were "proceeding well", and that the Bank had finalised a zero financing agreement with the finance ministry for the 2023 budget, which was a prior action required by the IMF for programme support.
Addison also announced that commercial banks' required reserve ratios would increase to 14% from 12% starting April 13, in the hope of ensuring banks maintain adequate liquidity in the aftermath of a domestic debt restructuring the country completed last month. Some analysts were surprised by the rate hike. "Given that the authorities had rejected higher bids at recent bond auctions, we expected the Bank of Ghana to remain on hold," said Razia Khan, Standard Chartered's Chief Economist for Africa and Middle East. "However, the tightening by 150 bps signals some return to economic orthodoxy, reinforced by the intent to create a new MoU on zero financing of the deficit – and most likely – the demands of any IMF programme," she added. (Reporting by Cooper Inveen and Christian Akorlie; Writing by Hereward Holland; Editing by James Macharia Chege, Mark Porter and Alex Richardson)
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