Audio By Carbonatix
First Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Zakaria Mumuni, says the cedi's performance is not only a dramatic reversal from last year but an unprecedented feat since adopting a flexible exchange rate regime.
“Year to date, we’ve had the cedi appreciating by over 12%—specifically 12.2% [to dollar],” he stated on PM Express Business Edition.
“The same time last year, we had depreciated by about 13%. So this is a complete reversal of what the situation was.”
Calling it “maybe unprecedented,” Dr. Mumuni said the cedi’s surge reflects the most decisive and effective policy mix the central bank has rolled out in recent history.
“If you look at the data from when we started the floating rate regime up to now, this is the only time within the first four or five months that we have had this level of strength in the Ghana cedi.”
He emphasised that the turnaround is largely driven by domestic policy, not just external conditions.
“The domestic factors really have more weight in this performance than the external factors,” he said. “It simply reflects the careful mix of policies that are being implemented.”
A key part of this strategy was the Bank of Ghana’s decision to hike interest rates and tighten monetary policy, moves that initially attracted public backlash.
“When we raised the policy rate, a lot of people, including GUTA, came after us,” he recalled.
“They had all kinds of comments. Analysts were not happy. But we knew exactly what we were doing—and it’s the fruits you are beginning to see.”
Dr. Mumuni pointed to the Bank’s aggressive liquidity management as central to the disinflation process. “We tightened monetary policy to reengineer the disinflation process,” he explained.
“This is really helping, and we are doing it through our open market operations.”
He added that the earlier hike in the cash reserve ratio also helped soak up excess liquidity.
“That has already sterilised some cedi liquidity in the system.”
The official’s remarks signal the central bank’s growing confidence that its unpopular but firm measures are yielding results.
He believes the cedi’s strong showing is proof that policy discipline and market management are starting to restore credibility to Ghana’s macroeconomic framework.
Latest Stories
-
‘Feed the Industry’ programme targets chronic raw material shortages in agro-processing sector
17 minutes -
Afenyo-Markin disowns viral anti-LGBTQ+ post, claims account was compromised — but his own record tells a different story
20 minutes -
Government explores traditional land equity system to unlock large-scale farming
22 minutes -
Ishmael Yamson & Associates marks 12th Business Roundtable with foundation launch
26 minutes -
Trade Ministry secures 40,000 acres in Yeji to support commercial farming
33 minutes -
Africa seeks strategic partnerships, not sympathy – Mahama tells global investors
39 minutes -
Government must deliver on jobs and cost of living, not excuses – Samuel Jinapor
51 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Breel Embolo banned from flying to USA over last-minute travel issues
54 minutes -
Consul Alfred Agbesi Woyome: The Business Diplomat
55 minutes -
Minority criticises Ablakwa over ‘PR spectacle’ around evacuation of Ghanaians from South Africa
59 minutes -
IJM, Netherlands partner with police to combat human trafficking in Ahafo Region
1 hour -
Wa Regular Baptist Church marks 70 years, calls for action against galamsey, drug abuse and occultism
2 hours -
We don’t see inflation increasing above 5% by December 2026 – Ato Forson
2 hours -
PSInno Initiative to support 1,100+ agribusinesses and youth-led firms in Northern Ghana
3 hours -
Energy security: Why Ghana must urgently fast-track the new mooring system project at Tema
3 hours