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Reuters
Reuters
Business

IMF: Ghana talks constructive, more work needed on debt analysis

FILE PHOTO: A trader walks past a barricaded street before the arrival of Britain's Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, to visit the Jamestown Cafe in old British Accra, Ghana November 3, 2018. REUTERS/Francis Kokoroko/File Photo

The International Monetary Fund said on Friday that talks with Ghana's government about a potential loan programme had been constructive but that more work was needed on a debt-sustainability analysis.

Ghana approached the IMF for financial support in July as foreign investors dumped its debt and as street protests broke out over rocketing prices.

A team from the Fund arrived days later to begin talks on a support programme and reforms to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability in the gold, oil and cocoa-producing nation.

Discussions resumed on Sept. 26 with a mission that ended on Friday.

The IMF said in a statement that its staff would now return to Washington for further technical work including assessing Ghana's debt sustainability.

"The discussions with the authorities will also continue in the weeks ahead. ... We reaffirm our commitment to support Ghana in these challenging times," the fund added.

Ghanaian policymakers have taken steps to address the economy's rapid deterioration, including cutting spending and implementing aggressive interest rate hikes.

The central bank raised its main lending rate by a further 250 basis points to a five-year high of 24.5% on Thursday, saying inflation and risks remained high.

The cedi currency is down around 40% against the dollar this year although its slide has slowed, aided by the disbursement of a $750 million loan from Afreximbank and the signing of a syndicated cocoa loan of $1.13 billion.

Inflation, however, climbed to a 21-year peak of 33.9% in August.

Net foreign reserves have dwindled to $2.7 billion in September from $6.1 billion in January.

Ghana's finance minister last week said negotiations with the IMF would be fast-tracked.

(Reporting by Cooper Inveen, Sofia Christensen and Anait Miridzhanian; Editing by Alexander Winning and Hugh Lawson)

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