Accra, Dec. 28, - Companies and organisations are being encouraged
to use less of cheques and more of the Automated Clearing House (ACH) for
payments in the coming year.
A statement signed by Mr Archie
Hesse, the Chief Executive of Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement Systems
(GhIPSS), and copied to the Ghana News Agency, said the move to drive patronage
for ACH was in line with the global trend towards the use of technology to
achieve efficiency.
It said the use of cheques by
organisations had been a long-held tradition because they were perceived as a
more formal way of making payments.
The statement noted that the use
of cheques, especially for bulk payments, was cumbersome and inefficient, cost
more, and consumed a lot of time that could be profitably used for core
activities of the organisation.
“The use of cheques also exposes
firms to cloning and sometimes difficulty in tracking cheques that have been
issued, but ACH is electronic, quicker, safer and easier to trace,” it added.
The ACH comes in two main forms -
Direct Credit and Direct Debit and an ACH transaction takes about 24 hours or a
couple of hours in the case of express service.
The statement explained that
unlike cheques, which must be individually issued to each recipient, ACH
payments could be batched in large volumes and sent electronically at once to
several recipients.
“ACH patronage has been rising
steadily since its introduction recording over 3.3 million transactions in the
first half of 2017, representing close to 48 per cent of clearing house
transactions, ‘’ it said.
However a lot of the ACH
transactions are of lower values, accounting for less than 20 per cent of
clearing house transactions in value terms,” the statement added.
It said the clearing house
transactions comprised cheques and ACH and GhIPSS was hoping that its campaign,
which had resulted in increased patronage for ACH, would be intensified to see
a significant rise in the value of ACH transactions as well.
GNA
Akatsi North to establish
crocodile view resort
Akatsi (V/R) Dec. 28, -The Akatsi
North district of the Volta Region has developed a crocodile pond at Ave Dakpa
as part of efforts to exploit its tourism potentials for development.
The pond is to be further
developed into a “Crocodile View Resort” to place the area on tourists’ hot
maps.
Dr Archibald Yao Letsa, Volta
Regional Minister, who commissioned the pond commended the Assembly for the
initiative and said the resort would boost tourism.
He said government was committed
to exploiting the potentials of the region and challenged the district to
register at least 5,000 farmers under the “Planting for Food and Jobs”
initiative.
Dr Letsa said agriculture ranked
first among the region’s potentials and promised to support the District in
undertaking large scale cashew production.
Dr Prince Amuzu, the District
Chief Executive, said the District was investing in granite, clay, cassava and
fruit processing and also soap, tomato and a kente factory.
He said the commercial
cultivation of oil palm, mango, coconut and cashew were being considered and
that the Ave-Afiadenyigba and Ashiagborvi dams would be developed for
large-scale irrigation.
Dr Amuzu said the Assembly was
also constructing a theatre at the Ave Dakpa Health Centre, classroom blocks,
workshops for schools in the district, and a cultural centre.
GNA

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