Audio By Carbonatix
A senior economics lecturer with the University of Ghana has said it is time the Central Bank controls the activities of black market operators to stem the depreciating cedi.
Dr Eric Osei-Assibey said the parallel system where people are engaged in the foreign exchange business underground alongside the forex bureaux and commercial banks does not augur well for the local currency.
“To the extent that this has created a parallel rate in the market where the Bank of Ghana is quoting ¢4.7 to $1 but the parallel market is giving about ¢5 to $1 is problematic,” he said at Joy FM’s first Cedi Forum, held at the Economics Department of the University of Ghana.
He explained that the phenomenon is challenging “because the Central Bank seems to be losing control over the informal activities of the forex management.”
The local currency which has been depreciating fast in the last few months and there has been a lot of proposals on how to stem the tide.
The Ghana cedi trades on the interbank market at ¢4.94 to $1 and sells at ¢5 on the black market eating away the capital of exporters, importers and automobile spare parts traders.
The Forum was on the theme ‘Ghana’s depressing cedi depreciation: How do we stem the tide?’
Contributing to the discussion, the Economics lecturer said business people and other multinational who are not getting a good rate from the banking sector would leave to the black market.
He believes it is time the Central Bank checks the management of forex system which he says is not tight enough and lacks transparency.
“This has gone on from time immemorial where we have left the black market to grow without any check…changing money from a forex bureau and not being asked for documentation like identity cards is not good enough,” he observed.
According to him, the lack of a mechanism to track such transactions begs the question having a control over the sector.
“If we don’t tighten the regulations and controls and bring more transparency to the transactions system, it will continue to plague the economy,” he said.
Dr Osei-Asibey also blamed imbalance in trade relations, exporting less and importing more as bringing pressure on the cedi.
“We can also attribute the large per cent of it to microeconomics mismanagement. In the past if you look at the data, you will realise that in most times we have rapid depreciation the currency, we seem to have high fiscal dominant, government overspending and very weak liquidity management from the Central Bank,” he noted.
According to him, with such drivers, a country is likely to have more demand-driven factors that will accelerate the depreciating rate of the currency.
Latest Stories
-
Avenor collapse: Engineer calls for strict construction site inspections by assemblies
3 minutes -
Young climate advocates blame attitudes, weak enforcement for Ghana’s recurring flood crisis
10 minutes -
School of Thoughts Ghana empowers Upper West students with AI, leadership, and market-ready skills
19 minutes -
Wa East MP injects GH¢100,000 into road programme to boost infrastructure works
19 minutes -
Ayine, Afenyo-Markin to headline African Governance and Anti-Corruption Summit in Accra
22 minutes -
Sissala East MP secures 15 new telecom sites to improve network coverage
22 minutes -
Fidelity Bank Atta Gyan calls for structural solutions to unlock capital for Ghana’s productive sectors
29 minutes -
Avenor collapsed building had weak concrete, no engineering oversight — GhIE
32 minutes -
MobileMoney Fintech calls Extraordinary General Meeting for June 12
39 minutes -
Why discipline, not ambition, will decide Ghana’s next business winners
44 minutes -
Preliminary probe points to lack of permit in Avenor building collapse
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, June 8, 2026
1 hour -
Former PMMC CEO rejects pay-to-play award schemes, advocates service-driven leadership
1 hour -
Mahama pushes for stronger Ghana-Belarus partnership in agriculture, mining and manufacturing
1 hour -
Mahama heads to Minsk talks seeking stronger Ghana-Belarus economic ties
1 hour