Accra - Ghana must remove "ghost workers" from its public sector
payroll before the European Union resumes budget support suspended a
year ago, the EU ambassador to the West African country, William Hanna,
said on Tuesday.
EU grants worth up to $250m could be crucial as
Ghana seeks to recover from a fiscal crisis that has slowed the rapid
GDP growth the country enjoyed for years due to its exports of gold,
cocoa and oil.
Hanna said the EU suspended aid because of the
country's fiscal problems and any resumption depends on the outcome of
government talks with the International Monetary Fund on a financial
assistance programme and other factors. An IMF deal could be concluded
by February, sources close to the talks said.
But in August, the
EU learned of a separate concern involving fake government workers whose
presence, along with related problems, inflated the payroll, Hanna
said.
"If we are paying for people in Ghana it has to be real teachers, real nurses, not ghost workers," Hanna told Reuters.
The
EU launched a probe to determine the scale of the problem, Hanna said.
He welcomed a government decision to address the problem with an
inter-ministerial committee.
"The government has to not just
address it but deal with it, identify the ghost workers, take sanctions
against those who are responsible, remove those names from the list,
clean up the database and stop these leakages," he told Reuters.
Ghana
has a large civil service relative to its 25 million population and its
wage bill escalated sharply in the election year of 2012 due in large
part to a government effort to harmonize public sector salaries.
The
rise pushed the budget deficit to 12%, prompting ratings agencies to
downgrade Ghana. In other signs of its macro economic problems,
inflation rose to 17% in November and the currency has fallen sharply
since 2013.
The IMF representative in Ghana, Samir Jahjah, said
the government has worked since early 2014 to address payroll
irregularities. For its part, the government says it has significantly
reduced wages as a percentage of revenue.
"Once the remaining
details of their medium-term reforms are finalised and external
financing assurances from bilateral donors and international
institutions are confirmed, a financial arrangement to support Ghana's
economic program would be agreed," Jahjah told Reuters.
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