Audio By Carbonatix
Prof. Fred Dzanku, a development economist, has praised the Mahama administration for steering Ghana’s economy in a positive direction during its first year in office, but stopped short of giving a definitive assessment, warning that structural challenges remain unaddressed.
Prof. Dzanku, Associate Professor at the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER), University of Ghana, made the remarks on Newsfile the day after President Mahama’s 2026 State of the Nation Address, speaking in his professional capacity.
Asked to assign a score to the government’s economic performance, he declined, noting that key macroeconomic indicators were moving in the right direction.
“If we are looking at macroeconomic stability — your exchange rate, your inflation, your fiscal space — they are pointing in the right direction. So far, we are going in the right direction. Let’s sustain it over a long period of time,” he said.
The government has framed 2025 as a year of stabilisation. A February 23, 2026, press release from the Ministry of Finance highlighted a budget deficit narrowed to 1.0 per cent of GDP, below the 2.8 per cent target, alongside a primary balance surplus of 2.6 per cent of GDP.
Inflation fell to 3.8 per cent in January 2026, marking the 13th consecutive month of decline and the lowest level since Ghana’s CPI was rebased in 2021.
The Bank of Ghana has also cut interest rates cumulatively by 12.5 percentage points since July 2025.
Despite these gains, Prof. Dzanku expressed caution, pointing to structural issues that could undermine sustained growth.
“Ghana has spent an average of 36 per cent of government revenue on interest payments over the past decade — against a sub-Saharan average of 8 per cent,” he said. He also noted that government capital investment has dropped from around 27 per cent of GDP in 2015 to about 10 per cent today, while GDP per capita growth has been volatile, averaging just 2.3 per cent over the decade — far below the 4–6 per cent needed for meaningful structural transformation.
“I want to be optimistic because everybody wants things to go well,” Prof. Dzanku said. “But because of where we’ve been and where we came to, I adopt a wait-and-see attitude.”
Latest Stories
-
Ghana launches revised Early Childhood Care and Development Policy to strengthen child development framework
3 minutes -
AI to transform 49% of jobs in Africa within three years – PwC Survey
16 minutes -
Physicist raises scientific and cost concerns over $35m EPA’s galamsey water cleaning technology
29 minutes -
The road to approval: Inside Ghana’s AI strategy and KNUST’s leadership
1 hour -
Infrastructure deficit and power challenges affecting academics at AAMUSTED – SRC President
1 hour -
Former US diplomat sentenced to life for abusing two girls in Burkina Faso
1 hour -
At least 20 killed after military plane carrying banknotes crashes in Bolivia
1 hour -
UK reaffirms investment commitment at study UK Alumni Awards Ghana 2026
2 hours -
NCCE pays courtesy call on 66 Artillery Regiment, deepens stakeholder engagement
2 hours -
GHATOF leadership pays courtesy call on Chief of Staff, Julius Debrah
2 hours -
KiDi unleashes first single of the year ‘Babylon’
2 hours -
Ghana Boxing Federation unveils new logo at Accra Sports Stadium
2 hours -
Pink Ladies Cup: Agejipena scores debut goal as Black Queens thump Hong Kong
2 hours -
Ghana pays tribute to 1948 heroes at 78th anniversary observance
3 hours -
Allowance payout will strengthen Ghana’s decentralization framework – Tano North Assembly Members
3 hours
