Ghana’s inflation nearly hits 30-year low as markets surge

Ghana · Markets Ghana inflation has fallen to roughly 3.4% in 2026, near a three-decade low and down from 23.8% at the end of 2024, a turnaround that has triggered deep interest-rate cuts and helped push the Accra stock market up about 73% this year. How far Ghana inflation has fallen Ghana’s headline inflation eased to about 3.4% by May 2026, after touching 3.2% in March. As recently as the end of 2024 it stood at 23.8%. That marks more than a year of steady
disinflation and one of the lowest readings in nearly three decades. For households battered by the 2022 debt crisis, the relief is tangible. Cheaper food and fuel have eased the squeeze on living costs across the country. Economists caution, though, that base effects from last year’s high prices flatter the comparison. The rate cuts that followed Cooling prices have given the Bank of Ghana room to ease. The central bank has brought its policy rate down to around 14%, from peaks above 30% in 2023.
One reduction earlier in the cycle reached a record 350 basis points. Cheaper credit is now feeding through to businesses and the wider economy. Why the stock market is soaring Investors have noticed. The Ghana Stock Exchange Composite Index has gained roughly 73% in 2026 and crossed the 15,000-point mark for the first time in its history. Financial and petroleum stocks have led the charge, lifting total market capitalisation to around 281 billion cedi. The rally has made the exchange one of the standout performers
on the continent. Falling inflation and interest rates have pushed savers toward shares in search of better returns. A stable currency through much of the run has added to the appeal for local and foreign buyers alike. Gold is the engine Behind the numbers sits a commodity windfall. Gold has traded near $4,700 an ounce, and Ghana’s output reached a record of about 6 million ounces in 2025. Those earnings have strengthened export revenue and helped rebuild buffers. Ghana remains Africa’s leading gold producer, and
the timing of the price surge could hardly have been better. The windfall has also let the central bank add to its reserves, giving it more firepower to steady the cedi. Mining royalties and taxes, in turn, have eased the pressure on the budget. The cedi and cocoa wrinkles The recovery is not without friction. The cedi gained more than 40% against the dollar in 2025, its first annual rise in over 30 years, before slipping about 8% in 2026. Cocoa, the country’s other great
export, has fallen sharply from its recent highs as global supply recovers. That trims one source of foreign earnings even as gold powers ahead. What to watch next Ghana’s rebound is anchored by an International Monetary Fund programme and a hard-won return to fiscal discipline after its 2022 default. Sustaining it will depend on keeping deficits in check. On current trends, analysts expect Ghana’s economy to overtake neighbouring Cote d’Ivoire this year. These figures move with markets and policy, so readers should treat them as
a snapshot rather than a forecast. The next test will be whether Ghana can turn cheap commodities into lasting industry rather than another boom-and-bust cycle. For now, the data give policymakers a rare stretch of good news. From default to recovery The turnaround is all the more striking given where Ghana stood three years ago. The country defaulted on much of its external debt in 2022, freezing it out of international markets and forcing a painful restructuring. An International Monetary Fund programme followed, and the
reforms attached to it underpin today’s disinflation. Restored confidence has drawn investors back to Accra’s bond and equity markets. For an internationally minded audience, Ghana now reads as a case study in how quickly sentiment can shift when policy holds. The risk is that politics or a commodity reversal could test that discipline. Frequently asked questions
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