Audio By Carbonatix
Dr Johnson Asiama, Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG), says Ghana’s macroeconomic conditions are showing early signs of stabilisation, but significant risks remain.
He said that although the inflation outlook was improving, it remained vulnerable to several factors.
“These include potential second-round effects, constraints on food supply, especially from northern Ghana and the Sahel, and external price shocks, particularly given the volatility in global commodity markets,” he said.
Dr Asiama was addressing the 124th Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) Meetings in Accra.
Inflation declined to 21.2 per cent in April 2025 but remained above the central bank’s medium-term target of 8 ± 2 per cent and the upper tolerance band of 19 per cent.
He cited geopolitical tensions and evolving global trade dynamics, including recent US-led tariff disputes, as developments that have increased market uncertainty.
These global trends could affect commodity prices, exchange rates, and financial flows in emerging markets like Ghana.
Dr Asiama emphasised the importance of MPC deliberations, stating the Committee would assess whether the current policy stance was sufficient to drive disinflation without hindering fragile economic growth.
Key focus areas, he noted, include the sustainability of the recent exchange rate appreciation, the durability of returning market confidence, and their implications for the medium-term inflation outlook.
Despite challenges, Ghana has secured a Staff-Level Agreement with the IMF on the Fourth Review of the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) Programme.
Standards and Poors, a rating agency, had upgraded Ghana’s sovereign rating from selective default to CCC+.
External reserves have also improved, the trade balance has strengthened, and consumer and business confidence indices continue to rise.
Latest Stories
-
77th Mafi Hogbetsotso: Traditional leaders call for unity and peace to drive development in Central Tongu
3 minutes -
Lands Ministry touts gains in forest restoration
13 minutes -
Building capacity for climate action: The CAP25 Story
24 minutes -
Chamber of Mines urges caution over proposed mineral royalty reforms
29 minutes -
Ghana has serious domestic challenges; international charity demands careful scrutiny – Afenyo-Markin
34 minutes -
IMF Board approves Ghana’s 5th Programme review, $300m+ disbursement expected
43 minutes -
Kwesi Botchway Jnr seeks status report from Attorney-General on EOCO galamsey probe
54 minutes -
Minority’s call for Lands Minister’s resignation lacks substance – Ministry
55 minutes -
President Mahama cuts sod for Ho Oxygen City Project
55 minutes -
Minority demands clarification on GH₵10m relief donations and Ghanaian troop deployment
1 hour -
Black Sherif pays courtesy call on UG Vice-chancellor ahead of Zaama Disco concert 2025
1 hour -
CDKN Ghana wins top award for climate resilience at Environmental Sustainability Goals Awards
1 hour -
Judiciary designates three High Courts to fast-track galamsey cases
1 hour -
Ahtoo Montessori school showcases Ghanaian culture at ENJOY AI 2025 global finals
1 hour -
Police restore calm and make arrests following clash at Boadua palace
2 hours
