
Audio By Carbonatix
The Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Johnson Asiama, has admitted that the path ahead in restoring macroeconomic stability remains complex and fraught with risks, both global and domestic.
According to him, this underscores the importance of today’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)meeting and the decisions they are set to make.
Giving opening remarks ahead of the three-day MPC meeting, Dr. Asiama said since its last meeting, there had been further moderation in inflation, citing the Ghana Statistical Service's April 2025 inflation.
He, however, noted that the inflation rate is still well above the medium-term target band of 8 ± 2%, breaching the upper consultation band of 19%.
In March 2025, the MPC responded decisively to the inflation outlook by raising the policy rate by 100 basis points to 28%.
The Governor said preliminary evidence suggests this action has contributed to dampening inflation momentum.
“Importantly, the cedi has appreciated sharply by nearly 19% between April and May 2025, helping to ease imported inflation pressures and restore public confidence. The appreciation reflects a combination of factors, including prudent monetary policy, improved market sentiment, and external sector gains”, he explained.
“We are also seeing encouraging signs of macroeconomic progress. Ghana has reached a Staff-Level Agreement with the IMF on the Fourth Review of the ECF [Economic Credit Facility] Programme, and although some prior actions remain outstanding, the trajectory is clearly positive. The recent S&P upgrade of Ghana’s sovereign rating from Selective Default to CCC+ further affirms this progress. External reserves have strengthened, the trade balance has improved, and consumer and business confidence indices are rising steadily”, he added.

The Governor, however, said significant challenges persist, mentioning the inflation outlook, while improving, remains vulnerable to second-round effects, food supply constraints, especially from northern Ghana and the Sahel and external price shocks, particularly given volatile global commodity markets.
He pointed out that geopolitical tensions and evolving global trade dynamics, including the recent US-led tariff disputes, have heightened market uncertainty and could affect commodity prices, exchange rates, and financial flows in emerging markets including Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
Liverpool reject £21.7m Inter Milan offer for Jones
12 minutes -
Ten-man Belgium held by Iran in second World Cup draw
22 minutes -
Doku criticised over plan to return home for birth
33 minutes -
Lamine Yamal shows why this could be his World Cup
42 minutes -
Serena Williams to make singles comeback at Wimbledon
53 minutes -
Meloni tells Trump to ‘focus on your own popularity’ as row escalates
1 hour -
World Cup still waits for real Brazil to show up
1 hour -
Mahama jokes about Father’s Day gifts, compares bouquet haul to First Lady’s Mother’s Day surprise
1 hour -
NCPTA backs ban on extravagant school graduations, calls for return to discipline, character building
2 hours -
Ghana ranked 1st in Africa with highest policy rate; cost of credit most expensive
2 hours -
Central Regional NADMO gives residents in dilapidated buildings 14 days to evacuate
2 hours -
Bibiani NPP members call for regional chairman’s resignation over disqualification of aspirants
2 hours -
Cloudy conditions, intermittent rains to persist nationwide – GMet
2 hours -
Zenith SME Business Empowerment Lab urges SMEs to adapt, innovate and thrive in a changing economy
3 hours -
T-bills: Government record 20% undersubscription; interest rates continue to rise
3 hours