Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG), Dr. Johnson Asiama has highlighted the strong technical and policy support received from Ghana’s international partners, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Dr Asiama disclosed that the Bank is currently working on a new legal framework aligned with modern economic realities and supported by the Bretton Woods institutions.
He further indicated that the Bank of Ghana does not expect to declare a loss this year, signalling improved financial management and institutional stability.
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Dr Asiama said this when the Finance Minister, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson led Ghana’s delegation to the IMF/Spring Meetings to meet with the Ghana Heritage Club at the World Bank headquarters in Washington, DC.
This was a purposeful and forward-looking engagement with Ghanaian professionals embedded within the IMF and World Bank systems, a statement issued by the Finance Minister after the meeting on Friday, April 26, said.
The President of the Heritage Club, Kofi Tsikata, welcomed the delegation and shared that approximately 350 Ghanaian staff are currently working within the IMF and World Bank in Washington. Globally, that number exceeds 700—underscoring the growing influence and presence of Ghanaian professionals in global economic institutions.
Dr. Forson emphasized Ghana’s strong and cooperative relationship with both the IMF and the World Bank.
He noted the recent increase in the World Bank’s Development Policy Operation (DPO) facility to over $400 million as a mark of confidence in Ghana’s reform efforts.
More importantly, he stressed that the focus should not be solely on the amount of borrowing, but on how the borrowed funds are used. There is now a clear shift toward borrowing for impactful investments rather than non-productive expenditures such as capacity building or consultancy contracts with limited national benefit.
His message was one of financial discipline, strategic planning, and accountability—prioritizing projects that yield tangible benefits for the Ghanaian people.
Also present at the meeting were Senior Economic Advisor to the President, Seth Emmanuel Terkper, and Chairman of the National Development Planning Commission, Dr. Nii Moi Thompson.
The meeting with the Ghana Heritage Club underscored the important role of the Ghanaian diaspora in global development institutions and reinforced the call for deeper collaboration between homegrown policy leadership and international expertise. It was not only a moment of reflection but also a strategic conversation about the future of Ghana’s development.