Audio By Carbonatix
The Bank of Ghana Governor, Dr. Johnson Asiama, has revealed that Ghana's trade surplus has increased to $6.2 billion for the first eight months of this year.
According to him, this was underpinned by robust gold exports and higher cocoa receipts.”
The Bank of Ghana Governor disclosed this when he opened the 126 Monetary Policy Committee meeting today, 15th September 2025.
Dr. Asiama also stated that, despite seasonal pressure on the cedi and moderation in remittance inflows in recent weeks, the country’s International Gross Reserve stood at US$10.7 billion in August, covering approximately 4½ months of imports.
On the cedi, he argued that the local currency remains among the strongest globally year-to-date, having appreciated by about 21% as of September 12, 2025.
“It now ranks alongside high performers such as the Russian ruble, Swedish krona, Norwegian krone, Swiss franc, Euro, and British pound. This outperformance reflects prudent monetary policy, effective liquidity management, fiscal consolidation, and increased foreign-exchange inflows,” the Governor added.
Banking Sector Development
The Bank of Ghana Governor went ahead to assure the public that the banking sector remains stable and improving, with the capital adequacy ratio (without reliefs) rising to 19.5% in July 2025.
He also revealed that while NPLs remain elevated at 21.7% it dropped to 8.4% when fully provisioned losses are excluded, underscoring ongoing resilience as recapitalisation and strict underwriting continue.

On the fiscal side, he said "the execution in the first half of 2025 signalled consolidation: the deficit on a commitment basis was contained at 0.7% of GDP [Gross Domestic Product], below target, contributing, together with cedi strength and external restructuring to a decline in the public debt ratio by mid-year.”
On policy rate development, the Governor reiterated that "the committee's readiness to adjust as the disinflation process evolves and risks, such as global trade disruptions or prospective utility tariff adjustments are assessed”.
The Governor believes that its tight monetary stance and fiscal consolidation played a critical role in headline inflation falling further to 11.5% in August 2025.
Latest Stories
-
Washington Post chief executive steps down after mass lay-offs
27 minutes -
Iranian Nobel laureate handed further prison sentence, lawyer says
38 minutes -
U20 WWCQ: South Africa come from behind to draw against Black Princesses in Accra
48 minutes -
Why Prince William’s Saudi Arabia visit is a diplomatic maze
49 minutes -
France murder trial complicated by twin brothers with same DNA
59 minutes -
PM’s chief aide McSweeney quits over Mandelson row
1 hour -
Ayawaso East primary: OSP has no mandate to probe alleged vote buying – Haruna Mohammed
2 hours -
Recall of Baba Jamal as Nigeria High Commissioner ‘unnecessary populism’ – Haruna Mohammed
2 hours -
Presidency, NDC bigwigs unhappy over Baba Jamal’s victory in Ayawaso East – Haruna Mohammed
2 hours -
Africa Editors Congress 2026 set for Nairobi with focus on media sustainability and trust
2 hours -
We are tired of waiting- Cocoa farmers protest payment delays
3 hours -
Share of microfinance sector to overall banking sector declined to 8.0% – BoG
3 hours -
Ukraine, global conflict, and emerging security uuestions in the Sahel
4 hours -
Either defer new royalty regime or abolish Growth and Sustainability Levy – Chamber of Mines to government
5 hours -
The Suit is a shroud ; the fugu is our resurrection
5 hours
