Ghana will miss its budget deficit target for 2016 because of disappointing oil output and higher-than-expected spending on elections and energy sector debts, Finance Minister Seth Terkper said. West Africa’s second-biggest economy will miss its fiscal shortfall aim of 5.3 percent of gross domestic product by 1.5 to two percentage points, Terkper told reporters Tuesday in the capital, Accra. Ghana’s shortfall in 2015 was 6.3 percent of GDP, he said. “The higher deficit was on account of FPSO shutdowns resulting in lower crude and gas output,” he said, referring to the outage in the second quarter of an offshore oil field operated by Tullow Oil Plc. Setting aside extra money for the 2016 elections and upfront payments for the restructuring of debts accumulated by state-owned energy sector companies were higher than initially planned, he said. Power utilities had arrears on 2.6 billion cedis ($629 million) of loans when the […]