Mahama's winning streak? Ghana's inflation hits lowest levels in 4 years
Ghana's inflation rate dropped to 13.7% in June, marking its lowest level in over four years.
Food inflation decreased substantially from 22.8% in May to 16.3% in June, with non-food price growth also slowing.
This decline is part of a six-month consecutive downward trend, showcasing economic recovery momentum.
According to the latest Ghana Statistical Service figures, annual inflation fell drastically to 13.7% in June, down from 18.4% in May.
This is the sixth consecutive monthly fall, and the lowest reading since late 2020.
In Accra, the cedi remained steady at 10.35 to the dollar at 10:19 a.m, as reported by Bloomberg.
Food inflation dropped from 22.8% in May to 16.3%. Iddrisu reported that the growth in non-food prices slowed to 11.4% from 14.4% the previous month.
The monetary policy committee of the central bank will make its next interest-rate announcement on July 23.
Given the more benign inflation reading, it might be able to reduce borrowing costs.
Government Statistician Alhassan Iddrisu revealed the statistics in Accra on Wednesday, citing the country's stronger currency and favorable external conditions as important factors in alleviating inflationary pressures.
A similar trend last month indicated that consumer inflation fell to 18.4% in May from 21.2% in April, highlighting a steady disinflationary pattern since the beginning of the year.
Iddrisu had also voiced confidence that inflation would continue to fall, given the current macroeconomic conditions.
Political backdrop and policy implications of the John Mahama administration
President John Mahama, who came to power earlier this year, has led the country to positive inflation rates.
Since assuming office, Mahama's administration has prioritized budgetary restraint, currency stability, and export growth as important drivers of economic development.
Ghana's capacity to maintain this development will be dependent on a number of factors, including continuing currency stability, good fiscal management, and favorable commodity prices.
Ghana, as one of the few African economies displaying significant indicators of macroeconomic stability in 2025, is providing a positive signal to both domestic and foreign investors.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
22 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Distressed Debt Swaps Are Mostly Costly Failures, HPS's Puri Says
Troubled companies are failing to stay afloat by forcing losses on investors through debt swaps, proving such deals don't work, according to HPS Investment Partners. 'There's a lot of money and fees going out the door and there's a lot of brain damage and creditors and recovery rates have been totally demolished and it didn't work anyway,' Purnima Puri, head of liquid credit and a governing partner at HPS, said on the Bloomberg Intelligence Credit Edge podcast Thursday.


Bloomberg
33 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Slow Sales of Tesla's ‘Other Models' Point to a Cyberdud
The Cybertruck falls short of Elon Musk's predictions. Plus: Sperm banking by mail, and rising coffee thefts. By Save Bloomberg's Elon Musk reporter Dana Hull took a look at Tesla's quarterly sales report yesterday and noticed one model was clearly falling short of expectations: the Cybertruck. Plus: Sperm-freezing startups bring the process home, and coffee prices are so high, bean thefts are increasing. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up. Note: The Businessweek Daily will be off for July Fourth. See you Monday.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
BlackRock Is Making a Bunch of Money From Its Bitcoin ETF
Welcome to ETF IQ, a weekly newsletter dedicated to the $14 trillion global ETF industry. I'm Bloomberg News reporter and anchor Katie Greifeld. Larry Fink's change of heart on Bitcoin has translated into big bucks for BlackRock.