The Minister of Finance, Mr Ken Ofori-Atta, has hinted of plans by the government and the Bank of Ghana (BoG) to announce a “substantial increase” in the minimum capital of banks.
The announcement is to be made in the next two to three weeks’, the minister said, explaining that the new figure would aim at strengthening "the banking infrastructure and cut down on certain externalities and behaviours that are occurring because of some form of competition.”
While the government was not against competition in the banking sector, the minister said there were “different natures of competitions” that the country would not tolerate nor encourage, hence the need to weed them out.
He gave the hint at the annual luncheon and general meeting of the Ghana Association of Bankers (GAB) in Accra last week.
“Not to overstep the boundaries of the MoF but it is likely that the new capital requirement will be quite substantial,” he said.
He, however, assured the bankers that the government and the BoG had resolved to give some space for the banks to raise the needed capital.
Ghana as financial centre
The successful announcement of the new minimum capital for banks should bring to an end two years of speculation about the amount of capital the BoG will direct banks to raise.
After successfully recapitalising banks to GH¢120 million in 2012, the BoG had been working through consultations to arrive at an appropriate figure for the next round of recapitalisation.
Mr Ofori-Atta said those consultations had almost clustered and were now at a conclusive stage, with a new figure that is expected to inspire mergers and acquisitions due to be announced soon.
He said the recapitalisation directive would aim at building stronger banks that could help the government to achieve its objective of making Ghana an international financial hub.
As a government, Mr Ofori-Atta said the ministry had resolved to leverage Ghana’s stable socio-political environment to create a robust financial services sector that attracts global giants in the banking sector to set up in the country and offer services to businesses in sub-Saharan Africa.
While the dream is feasible, he said it would require the support of banks and other stakeholders in the sector to accomplish and thus called on GAB to partner the government in making it a reality.
He added that his outfit would not hesitate in granting incentives to the sector should it realise that such stimulants were needed to inspire growth and help create the financial hub that it desires.
The Finance Minister also mentioned the government’s resolve to see interest rates at a single digit, noting that the government had taken note of banks’ snail-pace response to the drastic cut in the BoG’s policy rate this year.
Source: Daily Graphic
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The Finance Minister without doubt has good plans for the banking sector in Ghana. However, his plans should be such as to keep a good balance of the players that would eventually survive this new thinking. Sight should not be lost of the fact that the banking sector as it is now, has been dominated by foreign interests and particularly, by one dominant country. Though this may be good for trade, among the nations close to us on the continent. What does this say for our economic security? The government in its plans must bring up some Ghanaian men and women in the financial sector, with the view to assisting them to become players in the banking sector. Two examples of what happened, when a government decided to help Ghanaian businesses compete, at a higher level in the market. Messrs Appenteng Mensah & Co and Mechanical Lloyd's., came into being, in 1970. This was about sixty years ago.
This is what I wanted to hear. Setting up a bank seems to be a new thing in Ghana now, thinking that banking is a money-making enterprise. The new minimum should be so high to weed out the fly-by-day/one-man banks and inspire mergers to form reputable and stable banks.