Ghana opposition seeks IMF view on $2 billion Chinese Bauxite deal

Reuters  |  ACCRA 

By Kpodo

Under the deal, approved by Ghanaian lawmakers last month, China's Ltd will provide $2 billion for government road projects in exchange for refined bauxite exports.

is expected to visit next week to finalise the deal, which the government has described as a barter deal and not a loan facility.

But in parliament told his side considers the deal to be a loan with implications for an already over-burdened taxpayer, and had written to seek the IMF's verdict.

He said the decision to write to the IMF stemmed from past statements by the government that debt servicing costs were among the factors constraining Ghana's development programme.

"It is our strong belief that this Sinohydro deal is a loan which is coming to add to the debt stock and we are concerned about the burden of additional borrowing cost on the over-burdened taxpayer," Iddrisu said.

IMF confirmed her office had received the letter. "We have received information from the parliamentary minority regarding the Ghana-bauxite deal. We will need to have more information to determine the nature of the transaction," Koliadina said in email response to

is in its final year of a $918 million credit deal agreed with the IMF in 2015 and must meet benchmarks including trimming its public debt to successfully exit in December.

Ratings agency estimates that Ghana's debt will rise above 70 percent of (GDP) by December, compared with 63.8 percent as of May, driven mainly by a decision by the government to finance the setting up of a new to acquire the assets of

Ghana, which exports gold and cocoa, plans to build a bauxite refinery by the end of next year.

(Reporting by Kpodo; Editing by David Holmes)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, August 24 2018. 00:50 IST