https://ocdn.eu/pulscms-transforms/1/TJ5k9kpTURBXy8wODcyZDVjOGRiMDBmMmNhZmU4OGM2NWZhOGNhYjU3NS5wbmeRkwXNAxTNAbyBoTAB
Dr Ernest Addison, Bank of Ghana Governor

Bank of Ghana’s corporate guidelines pushes some board chairs and CEOs out of office

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The Bank of Ghana has revealed that several board chairs and Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) of banks in Ghana have left their positions.

This is coming after the enforcement of the new Corporate Governance Directives.

Board chairs and board members who have served for long periods have all been replaced.

After the conclusion of a Monetary Policy Committee meeting, the Bank of Ghana said: “A year after the completion of the clean-up and recapitalisation exercise, the performance of the banking sector has improved markedly, signifying positive dividends from the reform programme.”

“Enforcement of the new Corporate Governance Directives issued by the Bank as part of the recent reforms led to several board chairs of banks and CEOs ending their tenure, while Board members who had served for prolonged periods were all replaced.”

The report indicated that the banking industry has built up a much stronger balance sheet and seen some strong asset growth, improved quality of loans and profitability during the year.

It added that the total assets of the banking sector recorded a 22.8% year-on-year growth at the end of December 2019. The total assets increased to GHC129.06 billion at the end of the year.

The increase in total assets was on account of significant growth of 22.2% year-on-year in deposits to GHS83.46 billion underscoring renewed confidence in the banking sector.

Meanwhile, the industry’s Capital Adequacy Ratio, computed in accordance with the Capital Requirement Directive under the Basel II/III capital framework, stood at 17.5% at the end of December 2019, and above the 13% minimum regulatory benchmark.

Asset quality also improved significantly and the NPL ratio declined sharply to 13.9 percent in December 2019 from 18.2% in December 2018.

This reflected increased loan recoveries, write-offs, and higher credit growth.

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