MPC: Load shedding could have negative
impact on economy
Accra, March 19, GNA - The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)
on Monday gave a positive assessment of the economy but
warned that the continued load shedding and unpredictable
energy supply could impact negatively on the economy.
"(However,) continued load shedding and unpredictable energy
supply is constraining activity in, especially the energy
sensitive sectors with the risk of potential output losses
and cost price pressures in the immediate horizon," Dr Paul
Acquah, Governor of the Bank of Ghana, told a Press
Conference in Accra.
Dr Acquah, who is also the Chairman of the MPC, said the
economic fundamentals remained strong with the last quarter
of 2006 witnessing increased economic activity, mostly
driven by fiscal expansion.
He said implementation of a firm budgetary expenditure
policy well aligned with budgetary resources in the current
budget should support steady fiscal consolidation, put
downward pressure on prices and sustain the progress toward
achieving the single-digit inflation target with accelerated
growth.
On the whole, Dr Acquah said, the economy was positioned
firmly on the path of declining inflation, and towards the
goal of single-digit.
It is in this direction that the Monetary Policy Committee
had decided to maintain the Prime Rate at 12.5 per cent.
Besides, business and consumer confidence indicators are at
high levels and inflation expectations relatively subdued,
with stability in the foreign exchange markets.
The Bank's Composite Index of Economic Activity indicates a
pickup of growth in the fourth quarter to 11.7 per cent in
real terms, with year-on-year real growth of 17.5 per cent
above the trend growth of 10.2 per cent.
"All the sub-components of the index recorded significant
increases except for the notable declines of cement sales
and industrial consumption of electricity, which have strong
links with the on-going electricity load management," Dr
Acquah said.
According to Dr Acquah the banking industry was building up
strong balance sheets and an increasing or diversified asset
and private sector credit portfolio of improving quality
that should support continued economic expansion.
Bank credit to private and public institutions increased by
¢7,156.4 billion (37.6 per cent) to ¢26,177.4 billion in the
12-months to January 2007.
The manufacturing sector absorbed 23.6 per cent, followed by
services (21.0), commerce (18.4 per cent), construction
(13.6 per cent) and mining and quarrying (5.7 per cent).
In real terms, credit to the private sector increased by
32.6 per cent, significantly higher than 14.9 per cent
recorded for the same period in 2006, and the highest in 35
months.
Dr Acquah said the financial sector was also seeing
increased growth as banks took advantage of opportunities to
diversify their portfolios and grow their assets.
He said based on the latest data available, total assets of
the banking industry grew by 41.1 per cent to ¢51,837.2
billion (45.1 per cent of GDP) at the end of 2006, compared
with 17.5 per cent in 2005 (37.9 per cent of GDP).
"This development continued into January 2007 with annual
growth of 38.1 per cent. This is driven mainly by increases
in gross loans and advances."
Dr Acquah said the growth in the financial sector was also
taking place against the background of improved financial
sector soundness indicators. The banking system is well
capitalised, profitable, efficient and fairly liquid.
Banks' solvency remained strong as the industry recorded
Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) of 17.0 per cent as of January
2007 compared with 16.1 per cent same period in January 2006
and against a required Capital Adequacy Requirement of 10
per cent.
He said the ratio of Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) in total
loan portfolio continued to decline. It fell from 11 per
cent in October 2006 to 7.9 per cent in December 2006 and
further to 7.5 per cent at the end of January 2007.
Similarly, NPLs' net of provision fell from 5.9 per cent in
October 2006 to 2.0 per cent in December 2006 and to a low
of 1.3 per cent in January 2007.
All measures of operational efficiency and profitability of
the banking industry (deposits to total assets, cost to
income, deposits per employee, assets per employee, net
income, operating profits) with the exception of cost to
income and cost to total assets, improved during the period.
Dr Acquah said the external payment outlook remained
positive with commodity prices for cocoa and gold holding
firm.
The overall balance of payments position improved from a
surplus of US$84.34 million in 2005 to US$415.12 million in
2006.
Total exports recorded an increase of 33.0 per cent during
2006 over the 2005 level to US$3,726.67 million.
Growth in exports during the third quarter of 2006 was
sustained into the fourth quarter with a marginal (1.1 per
cent) increase to US$932.10 million. The fourth quarter
export growth was driven by growth in non-traditional
exports (34.5 per cent) and gold exports (1.2 per cent).
Dr Acquah said total imports in 2006 rose by 22.0 per cent
to US$6,753.68 million. Capital and intermediate goods
accounted for 73 per cent of total imports.
The relatively high import growth in the third quarter of
2006 slowed down by 2.2 per cent in the fourth quarter,
driven mainly by a relatively smaller oil imports in the
fourth quarter of 2006.
Total oil imports for 2006 increased by 45.7 per cent to
US$1,646.1 million, significantly above the US$1,129.4
million recorded in 2005, reflecting an increase in realised
unit price and 2.3 per cent in volume over 2005.
"The current account recorded a deficit of US$810.2 million
compared to US$773.4 million in 2005. However, the overall
balance recorded a surplus on the strength of debt
cancellation, private capital flows, and unrequited
transfers raising gross international reserves to US$2.05
billion at the end of February 2007.
Dr Acquah said private inward transfers, including those
received by NGOs, embassies, service providers, individuals,
through the banks and finance companies for January-December
2006 amounted to US$5.78 billion, which represented 21.5 per
cent increase over those for 2005, which were in turn 58.3
per cent increase over the transfers through banks and
finance companies in 2004.
He said the foreign exchange market remained buoyant in 2006
with purchases and sales of foreign exchange by the banks
and forex bureaux increasing by 16.6 per cent over the 2005
level to US$6.8 billion.
Cumulative purchases and sales for the first two months
amounted to US$1,140.87 million compared with US$1,086.43
million recorded for the same period in 2006.
On Government expenditure, Dr Acquah said total expenditure
for 2006 (including the supplementary budget) amounted to
¢39,828.6 billion, exceeding the budgetary ceiling by 2.4
per cent.
He said provisional data on the execution of 2006 Budget
indicated that total revenue and grants (including the
supplementary budget) amounted to ¢31,917.7 billion against
an end year target of ¢34,135.4 billion (a shortfall of 6.9
per cent).
The overall budgetary deficit - including the supplementary
budget- for 2006 resulted in a net domestic financing of
¢4,765.2 billion (4.2 per cent of GDP).
Dr Acquah explained that the financing of this deficit
caused a bounce in the public debt/GDP ratio from 10.8 per
cent to 13.5 per cent. This was accompanied by a significant
lengthening of the maturity structure of the stock of public
domestic debt.
He cited revenue shortfalls and unrealised resources under
the Supplementary Budget, which contributed about 3.7 per
cent of GDP to the total fiscal deficit for the fiscal
deficit.
In addition, public sector wage settlements, which were
about 13 per cent in excess of programme, and unexpected
transfers to manage the energy crisis overstretched the
expenditure under the Budget.
GNA
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