Audio By Carbonatix
The recent acknowledgment by President John Dramani Mahama, attributing the appreciation of the Ghanaian cedi to the country’s robust gross international reserves, validates the prudent economic policies of the previous NPP administration.
As of April 2025, Ghana’s reserves stand at $10.6 billion, with a substantial $8.98 billion inherited from the NPP government.
This confirms that the current NDC administration has benefited from strong macroeconomic buffers established under the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia era rather than implementing new stabilizing policies.
Minister for Finance Ato Forson also confirmed that the GoldBod programme, which involves buying and selling gold for foreign exchange, remains a key tool for achieving currency stability.
Dr. Amin Adam emphasized, “The NDC government has merely continued the seismic policy shift introduced by the NPP to leverage Ghana’s gold reserves as a strategic weapon against currency depreciation.”
Between May 2023 and December 2024, the NPP administration aggressively built gold reserves from 8.78 to 30.53 tonnes, enabling the Gold for Forex (G4FX) initiative that underpins current efforts.
The Minority is concerned, however, about inconsistencies in reserve data and the slow pace of gold accumulation under the NDC government, which has added less than one metric ton to gold reserves since January 2025.
Dr. Amin Adam called for transparency, urging the Bank of Ghana and Goldbod to reconcile these figures and provide Parliament with a full account of forex movements.
“Ghanaians deserve transparency and accountability to sustain the gains made on the cedi,” he said.
Finally, while the cedi’s appreciation should ideally lower inflation and interest rates, inflation has only marginally declined from 23% to 21% in early 2025.
The Minority expects the Monetary Policy Committee to reduce policy rates significantly but warns that deeper structural challenges remain.
Dr. Amin Adam concluded, “Macroeconomic discipline must be matched with transparency and reform—not rhetoric—to ensure that currency stability translates into real economic benefits for Ghanaians.”
Latest Stories
-
Ghana Airways restoration key to national pride and economic reset – Ablakwa
9 minutes -
US seizes second oil tanker off Venezuela’s coast
18 minutes -
Australian PM announces intelligence review as country mourns Bondi attack
28 minutes -
Imran Khan and wife given further jail terms after state gift fraud case
29 minutes -
5 perish in fatal collision on Cape Coast–Takoradi Highway
40 minutes -
Poultry imports driving egg glut – GAPFA
1 hour -
Legal lifeline for Ghanaians in America as lawyers association, Embassy move to tackle diaspora challenges
2 hours -
Photos: First Atlantic Bank PLC officially listed on Ghana Stock Exchange
2 hours -
Energy minister assures stable power as Ghana hits peak demand in December
3 hours -
Miguel Ribeiro Fiifi Brandful
3 hours -
Adom TV’s ‘Nine Lessons and Carols’ electrifies National Theatre in a festive extravaganza
4 hours -
Mahama orders $78m payment to Justmoh to resume Agona–Nkwanta road works
4 hours -
Christmas rush deepens traffic woes in Accra Central
4 hours -
Three arrested after viral video shows toddler being fed alcohol
4 hours -
Survivors ‘nervous and sceptical’ about release of remaining Epstein files
5 hours
