GHANA: A framework for progress
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GHANA: A framework for progress

Ghana has built a framework to enable economic takeoff. But sufficient investment is still lacking and development has now been further hampered by an energy shortage. By Christina Katsouris and Philip Eade

A SUPPLEMENT TO EUROMONEY/APRIL 1998: GHANA - THE SEARCH FOR INVESTMENT

Ghana's economic strategists are fighting hard to regain credibility after almost four years of drift and slippage. They are having some success. The IMF, having acknowledged that underlying fiscal performance is improving and inflation is coming down, has again given its backing - a key signal to other donors and investors.

US president Bill Clinton's decision to kick off his 11-day African tour with a visit to Ghana on March 23 was another plus point. "The president has chosen Ghana to be one of just five African countries which are being held up as role models for economic liberalization and democratic governance," said Ghana's communications minister Ekwow Spio-Garbrah. "If the US president enters Africa through Ghana, then I think other [foreign] businesses can feel good about using Ghana as a gateway."

Clinton was equally bullish, drawing attention to legislation before the US congress that will lower tariffs for textile exports from African countries, set up infrastructure and venture capital funds and open up the Exim Bank and other institutions to African countries deemed ready.

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