IMF board approves $600 mln payout for Ghana under loan programme

ACCRA, (Reuters) – The  International Monetary Fund’s board approved a first review of Ghana’s loan programme on Friday, allowing for the immediate disbursement of about $600 million under its $3 billion bailout programme, it said on Friday.

The decision comes after the gold, oil and cocoa producer reached a deal to restructure $5.4 billion of loans with its official creditors, a key step to unlocking the second tranche of IMF funding.

“All quantitative performance criteria for the first review and almost all indicative targets and structural benchmarks were met,” the IMF said in a statement.

The authorities’ reform efforts have helped to improve growth, decrease inflation and increase international reserves, the Fund said, forecasting that the economy would grow 2.3% in 2023 and 2.8% in 2024.

In a joint briefing with the Ghanaian authorities after the announcement, IMF Mission chief for Ghana Stéphane Roudet said the tranche would be available to the central bank within hours.

‘SHOT IN THE ARM’

Ghana turned to the IMF for financial support in 2022 as it grappled with its worst economic crisis in a generation, which came amid spiralling public debt-servicing costs.

“The board decision, along with the imminent release of funds, is a shot in the arm for the economy, especially the exchange rate, which remains vulnerable to fluctuations in sentiments and central bank reserve capacity,” Leslie Dwight Mensah, an economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies in Accra, told Reuters.