According to sources quoted by Reuters, Ghana’s official creditors have agreed to restructure debts that were extended to the country up until December 2022.
The agreement comes as the West African country closes in on a key step required to advance its restructuring.
An agreement between Ghana and its official creditors would allow the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Executive Board to authorise the payment of $600 million from its $3 billion bailout plan.
The “cut-off date”—the date beyond which newly signed loans with bilateral creditors will not be restructured—has come up as a point of contention in the negotiations that has prevented an agreement.
Ghana, one of the first nations in Africa to default on its foreign debt and a major producer of oil, gold, and cocoa, is experiencing its worst economic downturn in a generation, characterised by double-digit inflation and skyrocketing public debt.
About 25% of Ghana’s $20 billion in external debt that is designated for restructuring is held by bilateral lenders, notably China and France, who jointly chair the Official Creditor Committee (OCC).
While some creditors had pushed for March 24, 2020, when the Group of 20 introduced its debt service suspension initiative (DSSI) to help the world’s poorest countries cope with the fallout from the COVID crisis, others were said to prefer December 31, 2022, as the deadline, given Ghana’s earlier default that month.