Audio By Carbonatix
The local currency has crossed the ¢7 to one dollar mark on the retail market with less than two months into 2022.
Joy Business checks at some forex bureaus and commercial banks indicate that a dollar is being sold at a little above ¢7 cedis.
Whilst, some forex bureaus and banks are buying a dollar between ¢6.85-¢7, they are selling one dollar for ¢7-¢7.05
The cedi’s predicament has been largely attributed to the uncertainty about Ghana's fiscal outlook, despite interventions by the Bank of Ghana.
Lack of confidence in the Ghanaian economy by some investors has fueled selling of some of the country’s international bonds, whilst demand for the dollar for imports keeps rising.
Due to this, the cedi has depreciated by a little over 5% to dollar, and still ranks it as the second worst performing currency on the African continent, so far this year.
The situation could compel the Central Bank to introduce additional measures to contain the rapid fall of the local currency, though much work needs to be done by managers of the fiscal economy to reassure investors that revenue will be boosted, whilst the rising debt will be tamed.
Databank Research had said in its 2022 Quarterly Outlook Report that conditions that triggered the depreciation of the cedi in the last quarter of last year will persist until the first half of this year.
“The heightened uncertainty around Ghana's fiscal outlook worsened the cedi's woes in late-2021 after a hawkish policy tone in the US triggered a flight-to-safety by foreign portfolio investors in 3rd quarter of 2021. We expect these conditions to persist in half-year 2022 in addition to corporate import demand as Ghana's economy rebounds. The low prospect of an early-2022 Treasury issuance on the international capital market also exposes the cedi to depreciation pressure in first-half of 2022.
Meanwhile, if the value of the cedi does not improve, then businesses, particularly manufacturers that depends so much on imports for production will have to revise their budgets, whilst prices of some goods on the market will go up because of imported inflation.
| Currency | Buying | Selling |
| Dollar | ¢6.85-¢7 | ¢7-¢7.05 |
| Pound | ¢9.30-¢9.35 | ¢9.40-¢9.42 |
| Euro | ¢7.75-7.77 | ¢7.80-¢7.85 |
Latest Stories
-
Australians must prove they are over 18 to access porn under new laws
7 minutes -
Ghana not immediately threatened by fuel shortages – Energy Ministry
10 minutes -
Ghana records eight deaths, over 1,000 mpox cases since May 2025 – Health Minister
10 minutes -
X probes offensive Grok chatbot posts as AI safety concerns intensify
12 minutes -
Planet One announces TVET projects worth $327m in three West African countries
19 minutes -
UN Chief condemns attack on Ghanaian peacekeepers in Lebanon, demands accountability
25 minutes -
US-Israeli air campaign hits hundreds of military targets in new wave of Iran strikes
30 minutes -
Ghana must lead Africa in criminalising environmental destruction – Annoh-Dompreh
31 minutes -
US-Israeli war against Iran enters new phase with rise of hardline successor Mojtaba Khamenei
36 minutes -
Kofi Adu Domfeh honoured with Excellence in Climate Journalism and Advocacy Award
37 minutes -
WPL 2025/26: Hasaacas, Ampem Darkoa Ladies close in on another final
39 minutes -
Bole MP donates GHS200,000 to support teacher training college establishment
54 minutes -
Danyame Old Town residents face eviction on a land occupied for 200 years
57 minutes -
60% of our water bodies are polluted – Minority Chief Whip pushes Ecocide Law
58 minutes -
Gov’t distributes seized ‘galamsey’ water pumps to farmers to boost irrigation – Dumelo
1 hour
