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Governor of Ghana central bank resigns: sources

Xinhua, March 30, 2017 Adjust font size:

Governor of Ghana's central bank, Abdul-Nashiru Issahaku has resigned, sources who asked to be anonymous have revealed.

According to sources within the central bank, the governor who officially started his four-year term around September last year tendered his resignation on Wednesday citing personal reasons.

Although the governors of the central bank have been insulated against political risk through an amended Bank of Ghana Act which assures them the security of tenure, speculations have been rife immediately after the December election that the current government would like the governor to leave office so they could appoint a replacement.

Issahaku was first appointed by former president John Dramani Mahama in April 2016 in an acting position when Henry Kofi Wampah tendered his resignation six months before the end of his tenure.

Mahama was defeated at the polls by current president, Nana Akufo-Addo who won the election by 53 percent.

Sources within the central bank also named former head of the research department at the bank, Ernest Addison now with the African Development Bank (AfDB) as one of the front-runners to occupy the BoG chair.

The outgoing governor held his last Monetary Policy Committee press briefing on Monday, where he announced a 200 basis point reduction in the bank's benchmark policy rate from 25.5 percent to 23.5 percent. Endit