AfDB Grants $69m To Ghana Against Covid-19

Marie-Laure Akin-Olugbade

THE BOARD of Directors of the African Development Fund (ADF) on Friday approved a US$69 million grant to support Ghana’s efforts to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic and mitigate its socioeconomic impact on the nation.

The grant from the ADF, the concessional arm of the African Development Bank (AfDB), would provide fiscal budget support to finance the government’s national Covid-19 Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan and Coronavirus Alleviation Programme.

Specifically, the funds would help to upgrade the capacity of healthcare facilities to isolate, diagnose and care for patients, and provide more test kits, pharmaceuticals, equipment and beds.

It would also ensure adequate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for health workers and support financial incentives and an insurance package for health and allied professionals.

Ghana ranks fourth in Covid-19 infections in Africa after South Africa, Egypt and Nigeria.

As of July 24, 2020, the country had recorded 30,366 cases of the disease, with 26,687 recoveries and 153 deaths.

The ADF grant is a Crisis Response Budget Support operation, disbursable in a single tranche under the bank’s US$10 billion Covid-19 Response Facility.

The grant aligns with one of the bank’s High Five priorities, namely to “Improve the quality of life for the people of Africa.”

Under Ghana’s Covid-19 response programme, all affected persons will receive free treatment and free water supply.

Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) will benefit from a soft loan scheme with one-year moratorium and two-year repayment period. The private sector will also benefit from a tax freeze and refund, direct subsidies and a guarantee fund, enabling businesses to access bank credit.

The programme also aims to increase the percentage of the population tested from one per cent to three per cent by the end of December 2020, boost the number of points of entry reporting suspected cases of Covid-19 from one to 14 by the end of September 2020, and increase designated treatment centres with adequate intensive care facilities to 100 per cent by end December 2020.

Real GDP growth is projected at 0.9 per cent in 2020 compared to 6.1 per cent in 2019, while the current account deficit is forecast to widen to 3.6 per cent compared to three per cent in 2019, due to a decline in export earnings and lower tourism revenues and remittances.

 

GNA

Tags: ,