
Ghana’s monetary landscape has shifted decisively in recent months as the Bank of Ghana (BoG) continues an aggressive policy-rate cutting cycle aimed at supporting the country’s transition from post-crisis stabilization to economic expansion. The central bank’s latest 350-basis-point reduction, which brings the policy rate from 21.5% to 18%t, marks the lowest level since Ghana’s sovereign debt default in 2022. With cumulative cuts now totalling 1,000 basis points this year, Ghana stands out as the West African central bank with the most substantial easing cycle in 2025.
This shift reflects growing confidence in the country’s macroeconomic recovery, supported by falling inflation, stronger foreign-exchange reserves, and improving fiscal discipline. Importantly, record-high global gold prices have bolstered Ghana’s external position, boosting foreign-exchange inflows and strengthening the cedi. This stability has provided the central bank with greater room to ease monetary conditions without risking exchange-rate depreciation.
However, this rapid monetary easing still unfolds within a financial environment marked by tight liquidity and weakening investor appetite for government securities, raising questions about the sustainability of the easing cycle.
The Bank of Ghana’s justification for its accelerated rate reductions rests on several favourable macroeconomic conditions. Inflation has continued to decline, moving toward the bank’s medium-term target range of 4 to 6 percent. Foreign-exchange reserves have risen to approximately 11.41 billion dollars, equivalent to around five months of import cover, a level that significantly enhances Ghana’s external resilience.
Gold exports have been the key backbone of this reserve buildup, supported both by high global prices and government initiatives to channel more domestic gold into the central bank’s reserves. Combined with tighter fiscal management and subdued global inflation pressures, these conditions have strengthened the cedi and created a more stable currency environment.
This exchange-rate stability is crucial because it reduces imported inflation risks, allowing the central bank to cut rates aggressively without triggering a currency sell-off. While the BoG describes this process as “gradual easing,” the scale of the cuts signals a deliberate shift toward restoring affordable credit conditions after several years of crisis-driven tightening.
Yet the domestic debt market’s response presents a more complex challenge. The government’s recent Treasury-bill auctions have been undersubscribed for a second consecutive week, with bids falling roughly 23% short of the 6.42 billion cedi target. Banks and institutional investors have shown a preference for higher-yielding Bank of Ghana bills over lower-yielding Treasury securities. This highlights the disconnect between the central bank’s rate reductions and market expectations concerning liquidity, return, and risk.
While fiscal consolidation has reduced the government’s domestic borrowing needs and lowered T-bill yields, these lower yields have also decreased investor incentives. Tight liquidity across the financial system has further constrained market participation. All of this suggests that the monetary easing has yet to translate into a broad-based decline in market interest rates or a stronger appetite for government debt instruments.
The banking sector remains central to whether the easing cycle will produce its intended effects. The Ghana Association of Banks has declared that member institutions are prepared to adjust lending rates downward in response to the policy rate cuts, a move that could reduce borrowing costs for businesses and households. However, translating policy-rate reductions into cheaper credit is complicated by the structure of the financial system. Lending rates still average above 20%, far higher than the 18% policy rate and the 8 percent inflation rate.
This wide spread reflects several factors including high risk premiums, elevated operational costs, and lingering balance-sheet pressures following the domestic debt exchange, which left banks with impaired assets and reduced investment incomes. Without improved liquidity conditions and strengthened bank balance sheets, the downward transmission of lending rates may be slow and uneven.
For ordinary citizens, the implications are significant and mixed. Cheaper credit, if it materializes, could ease the burden on households seeking loans for education, housing, entrepreneurship, or personal needs. Small businesses in particular stand to benefit from reduced financing costs, enabling them to expand operations, hire more workers, and invest in productivity improvements.
At the same time, rate cuts tend to reduce returns on savings and short-term investments such as Treasury bills and fixed deposits. This may negatively impact retirees, middle-income savers, and households that have relied on interest income as a financial buffer. The full benefit of the easing cycle for citizens therefore depends on how effectively and quickly banks can reduce lending rates so that borrowing becomes more affordable while the impact on savings remains manageable.
The broader macroeconomic implications are cautiously optimistic. With real GDP growing by 6.3 percent in the first half of 2025, lower interest rates could amplify momentum across key sectors including manufacturing, construction, and services. A more accommodative monetary environment may revive investment appetite and support private-sector recovery.
Nevertheless, rapid rate cuts pose risks if they outpace the economy’s ability to safely absorb cheaper credit. The significant gap between inflation and the policy rate suggests that real interest rates remain high, indicating that the economy may still be running slightly warm. Excessive easing could reverse disinflation gains or weaken the currency if global conditions shift unfavourably. The stronger cedi, supported heavily by gold revenue inflows, has so far created a buffer against such risks, but this protection is not unconditional.
The persistent undersubscription of Treasury bills underscores the need for better fiscal-monetary coordination. If weak demand continues, the government may need to raise T-bill yields, which would dilute the impact of monetary easing. Alternatively, heavier reliance on BoG liquidity could weaken policy credibility and fuel concerns about fiscal discipline. Ensuring harmony between fiscal financing needs and monetary policy objectives is therefore essential in maintaining stability as the easing cycle continues.
Ghana’s accelerated monetary easing represents a pivotal shift from stabilization to expansion. The substantial rate cuts, supported by improving fundamentals, record-high gold prices, and a stable currency, demonstrate renewed confidence in Ghana’s economic outlook. Yet challenges remain, including weak T-bill demand, slow lending-rate transmission, and potential overheating risks.
The banking sector must play a central role by effectively passing on lower rates to consumers and businesses. For ordinary citizens, the easing cycle offers the promise of cheaper credit, but its benefits will depend on effective transmission and balanced financial conditions. Sustaining this recovery will require continued coordination between monetary policy, fiscal management, and financial-sector reforms to ensure that Ghana’s stabilization gains evolve into durable and inclusive economic growth.
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