Audio By Carbonatix
President John Dramani Mahama has affirmed that Ghana’s economic recovery is firmly underway, telling Parliament that his government did not seek to “arrest the dollar” but instead strengthened the national currency to compete effectively on the international stage.
Delivering the 2026 State of the Nation Address (SONA), President Mahama placed the performance of the Ghanaian cedi at the centre of his administration’s first-year achievements, framing its appreciation as a reflection of restored economic discipline and confidence.
The comment, which elicited laughter from some MPs, was seen as a subtle jibe at the former Vice President and NPP's 2024 election flagbearer, who once said his government had arrested the dollar only for his administration to leave the currency in a weaker state before exiting office.
“We did not arrest the dollar; we strengthened the cedi to put up a good fight against other currencies,” he told Members of Parliament.
Cedi Appreciation
The President reported that the cedi had appreciated significantly:
40.7% against the United States dollar
30.9% against the British pound sterling
24% against the Euro
These gains mark a dramatic reversal from previous steep depreciation episodes, which had in recent years driven inflation, eroded purchasing power, and unsettled import-dependent businesses.
Broad-Based Economic Recovery
President Mahama emphasised that the currency’s performance is part of a wider economic transformation.
“Ghana’s economic turnaround is broad-based and comprehensive. All sectors of the Ghanaian economy have witnessed remarkable improvement in our first year in office,” he said.
He attributed the progress to tighter fiscal management, productivity-enhancing reforms, and measures to restore credibility in economic governance.
Historic Milestones
Highlighting a landmark achievement, the President announced that Ghana’s economy had surpassed the $100 billion mark for the first time in its history.
“And most importantly, Ghana’s economy has surpassed the 100 billion mark,” he stated.
Projecting future growth, President Mahama suggested that, on current trends, Ghana could soon rank among Africa’s top ten largest economies, signalling renewed confidence in the country’s economic trajectory.
This first-year performance underscores the government’s focus on stabilising the cedi, strengthening fiscal discipline, and positioning Ghana for sustained growth.
Latest Stories
-
Photos: Mahama joins workers for 2026 May Day celebration at Jackson Park in Koforidua
48 seconds -
Government showing ‘selective reasoning’ on legal education reforms – Assafuah
3 minutes -
Black Stars: ‘Fewer local players get call-ups due to lower standards’ – Kwadwo Asamoah
11 minutes -
NACOC K9 Unit screens 430 Hajj pilgrims at Tamale Airport
15 minutes -
The real reasons Bank of Ghana losses increased in 2025 – Dr Gideon Boako
22 minutes -
GNFS saves 4-bedroom apartment from destruction after early morning fire at Winneba
22 minutes -
Firefighters battle industrial blaze in Prampram as reinforcements are deployed
28 minutes -
Bank of Ghana’s total loss for 2025 is GH¢44.5 billion not GH¢15.6 billion – Gideon Boako
34 minutes -
Wassa Gyapa: Western Regional Minister orders investigation into mining near school after viral video
47 minutes -
Boakye Agyarko calls on Bawumia ahead of nationwide tour for NPP Chairmanship bid
48 minutes -
Our energy progress requires unity, not politics – Energy Analyst, Kwegyir Essel
53 minutes -
Newsfile to tackle Akosombo fire and BoG’s GH¢15.6bn loss
1 hour -
Kasoa maternal death: GHS assures family of thorough investigation, rules out shoddy work
1 hour -
War criminal Mladic close to death, say lawyers asking judge for jail release
2 hours -
BoG’s performance should be judged by mandate, not balance sheet – Cudjoe Kuagbedzi
2 hours