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Debt Exchange Promises to be A Failure – Minority

The Domestic Debt Exchange Programme introduced by the government will fail, the Minority in Parliament has said.

The opposition lawmakers have asked the President to suspend the programme and engage further on it.

Addressing a press conference in Accra on Monday January 16, the Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu said the programme poses a threat to financial institutions and insurance companies as well as individual bondholders.

He explained that the financial institutions that support  businesses will not be in the position to do so again if the government goes ahead with the implementation of the programme.

“It is a risk to financial institution, insurance companies and now extended to individual bondholders,” Mr Iddrisu said.

He added “the financial institutions and insurance companies offer employment and they support businesses, this is at risk now.”

The Tamale South Lawmaker further asked President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to suspend the programme and engage further.

“Suspend the ongoing debt exchange, it is already failing, it promises to be a failure.

“Suspend it and engage in deeper consultation and allow for greater transparency In order to save the Ghanaian economy.”

“We demand transparency, they are simply not transparent even in the way they are managing this.”

The Minority lawmakers are not the only persons who have raised issues against the programme.

For instance, the Majority Leader in Parliament, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu has said that the Debt Exchange Programme could wipe out the middle class.

This, he said, is where the danger is hence, further engagements are needed.

He said these while speaking with a group of individual bondholders led by convener, Senyo Hosi and private legal practitioner Martin Kpebu when they submitted a petition to exclude individual bondholders from the debt exchange to him on Friday.

The Suame Lawmaker said “What we [are] talking about is that many of these bondholders also belong to the middle class and that’s where the major worry is. If we are wiping away the middle class, that could be dangerous, so we need to have some further dialogue on this.

“Government thinks that this is the best way forward, however, even if it is, we need to engage, reflect and then move on and that will encourage some people who have some doubt to better appreciate where we are.”

“Nothing can substitute for discussions, round table discussions and engagements wherever we find ourselves in. I think it’s important that we go back to the drawing table to have engagements with the major stakeholders…All of us are in it. And if we don’t manage it well, we’ve gone through this before, way back some 25, 30 years ago and repositioning was a major, major difficulty.

“Today many people are coming on board and if this thing should happen, how do we build confidence and trust and reconstruct a new savings culture?”

Also, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Member of parliament for Nsawam Adoagyiri, Frank Annoh-Dompreh asked the Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta to review the decision to include individual bondholders in the programme.

He described the inclusion of the individual bondholders as unfair and untenable.

“The Finance Minister (Ministry) must as a matter of urgency review as soon as possible its decision and resolution on individual bond holders. I don’t agree with them and I think it’s unfair and untenable! Review your decision now,” the Majority Chief Whip tweeted.

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