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depletion of foreign assets reserves at the Bank of Ghana (BoG) in the
election year of 2012, yesterday became a huge bone of contention at the
resumed sitting of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Parliament.
At
the sitting to look into foreign exchange receipts and payments of
ending December 2012, the Governor of the BoG, Dr. Kofi Wampah and his
two deputies, wrote to the Chairman of the Committee, Kwaku Agyeman
Manu, to excuse them (the bank’s officials) from appearing because they
were all attending “a very important meeting.”
The Finance
Minister, Seth Terkper and his deputies, who have direct oversight
responsibility over the operations of the bank, were also said to be in
“a serious meeting” at the Flagstaff House and could therefore not turn
up for the sitting.
Members of the Committee raised serious
concerns about the reduction in the reserves from $5.83 billion to
$596.8 million even though there were records of a rise in percentage of
net receipts of 9.7 percent over the same period, “which means the
total reserves should have seen a substantial increase.”
The
issue was first raised by the Ranking Member of the Committee, Alhaji
Ibrahim Dey Abubakari, who is also the National Democratic Congress
(NDC) Member of Parliament for Salaga South, and other members,
including the Chairman, Kwaku Agyeman-Manu; the New Patriotic Party
(NPP) Member of Parliament for Bosomtwe, Simon Osei-Mensah; NPP MP for
Ofoase/Ayirebi, David Oppon-Kusi; NPP MP for Bibiani-Anhwiaso-Bekwai,
Kingsley Aboagye-Gyedu; NPP MP for Dome/ Kwabenya, Adwoa Safo and NDC MP
for Keta, Richard Quarshigah. All sought to know what culminated in the
decrease in the foreign assets reserves.
The Head of Treasury at
the Bank of Ghana, Yaw Abalo, who represented the Governor, tried to
dance around the question. When he was pinned further to the wall to
furnish the committee with details of specific expenses from that
amount, he said that the amount was used to pay government debts and
also for the transaction of interbank markets.
The committee
members were not satisfied at all with the answer given and pleaded with
the chairman to adjourn the sitting so that the Governor of the Bank
himself as well as the Finance Minister could be invited to provide
tangible answers to the question.
Mr. Kwaku Agyeman Manu had no
other option than to adjourn the sitting indicating that members were
not at all satisfied with the answers provided and that there were more
probing questions that ought to be answered by the ‘right’ people.
The Minister of Finance was also represented at the sitting by the Internal Auditor at the Ministry, Annoh Kusi. |
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