
Audio By Carbonatix
In the Bible, Jesus told the Parable of the Talents, where a master entrusted his servants with money. Two invested and multiplied what they were given, while one, out of fear, buried his portion in the ground and was rebuked for failing to make it productive. The lesson is clear: resources are meant to work, not remain idle. Ghana’s gold reserves can be understood in the same light. While gold lying in vaults may have symbolic value, it achieves little if it does not actively support the economy, stabilise the currency, and ease the burden on ordinary citizens.
International reserves, including gold and foreign currency assets, are not merely symbols of wealth. They serve as a financial buffer to meet external obligations, support imports, stabilise the cedi, and instil confidence in investors. Holding an excessive proportion of gold, however, limits liquidity and flexibility because it cannot always be deployed quickly in times of economic need. By converting part of its gold into foreign exchange and other liquid assets, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has diversified reserves, increased flexibility, and ensured that these resources actively support the economy, while maintaining a substantial gold buffer of 18.6 tonnes in December 2025.
A comparison of macroeconomic indicators between December 2024 and December 2025 demonstrates why these actions were necessary:
• Inflation: fell from 23.8% to 5.4%
• Monetary Policy Rate (MPR): decreased from 26% in December 2024 to 18% in December 2025
• Total reserves: increased from US$9.3 billion to US$13.8 billion
In December 2024, Ghana faced staggering arrears and outstanding payments that added to the everyday hardship of citizens. Central government arrears stood at about GH¢67.5 billion, representing some 5.2% of GDP owed to contractors and suppliers, including GH¢21 billion in the road sector alone before the current administration took office. These figures underscored just how much creditor obligations had been neglected, despite severe economic distress amidst higher gold reserves (sitting idle).
Upon assuming office in January 2025, the government prioritized fiscal discipline and began systematically addressing these inherited arrears. For example, GH¢13 billion was allocated in the 2025 Budget to begin clearing verified contractor claims as part of a structured audit and payment program.
At the same time, the government demonstrated strong commitment to external debt servicing, thereby strengthening Ghana’s credibility with global investors and partners. As part of ongoing debt restructuring, Ghana completed its scheduled Eurobond obligations for 2025, making cumulative payments of approximately US$1.17 billion including US$349.5 million in January and a further US$349.5 million in July 2025, keeping the country fully up to date with these obligations.
The energy sector, which had been plagued by long‑standing debt burdens, was also a critical focus. In 2025, the government cleared approximately US$1.47 billion in legacy energy debts, including US$597 million to restore the World Bank’s partial risk guarantee, US$480 million to ENI and Vitol for outstanding gas invoices, and US$393 million in Independent Power Producer obligations. These payments helped restore confidence, revived critical energy supply infrastructure, and demonstrated a commitment to honouring foreign supplier contracts.
While Ghana previously held over 40% of reserves in gold, its peers, including Chile and Brazil maintain only 20–25% of reserves in gold, diversifying the rest into foreign currency assets to support liquidity, generate returns, and ease economic pressure on citizens, all while ensuring reserves continue to grow. Ghana’s BoG is now following the same internationally recognized strategy, proving that diversifying reserves does not weaken security; it strengthens it.
This prudent use of reserves has allowed the government to clear critical arrears, settle obligations to domestic and international partners, and enhance financial stability in key sectors. This stands in stark contrast to the previous administration’s economic mismanagement, where funds intended for economic stabilization such as the Stabilisation Fund (US$1.5 billion) and the Energy Sector Levies Account (ESLA), were largely misused, providing little benefit to ordinary Ghanaians. Despite high gold reserves in 2024, citizens continued to suffer from skyrocketing living costs, high inflation, and systemic debt across sectors, demonstrating that stockpiling reserves without strategic deployment does not translate into relief for the ordinary Ghanaian.
Effective economic management must ultimately translate into tangible improvements in the lives of ordinary citizens. The measures taken by the BoG and the government have achieved exactly that: fuel prices are at record lows, the cost of goods and services has decreased, and the cost of doing business has significantly fallen, creating a more predictable environment for families and businesses alike. Reserve accumulation continues to rise, from US$9.3 billion in December 2024 to US$13.8 billion in December 2025, demonstrating that Ghana’s macroeconomic foundations are strengthening while citizens reap the benefits.
In conclusion, the reduction in the proportion of gold reserves is not a sign of weakness nor an arbitrary attempt to manipulate the currency. It is a calculated, strategic move to diversify assets, increase liquidity, settle critical arrears, and support real economic activity. Ghana’s gold reserves remain a solid foundation, but now they are actively contributing to economic stability and improving living standards, fulfilling the central purpose of sound reserve management: resources that work, not sleep.
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