Bank of Ghana Cuts Rates by 250bps

2026-01-28 14:29 By Joana Ferreira 1 min. read

The Bank of Ghana cut its policy rate by 250 basis points to 15.5% at its first meeting of 2026, taking borrowing costs to their lowest level since February 2022.

Governor Johnson Asiama said headline inflation is expected to move close to the medium-term target of 8.0%, while economic growth is projected to remain strong in 2026.

Ghana’s inflation rate fell to 5.4% in December, its lowest since July 2022, marking the 12th straight month of disinflation.

The central bank said it will continue to monitor developments closely and take appropriate policy action to ensure that the gains from macroeconomic stability translate into sustainable growth.



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Bank of Ghana Cuts Rates by 250bps
The Bank of Ghana cut its policy rate by 250 basis points to 15.5% at its first meeting of 2026, taking borrowing costs to their lowest level since February 2022. Governor Johnson Asiama said headline inflation is expected to move close to the medium-term target of 8.0%, while economic growth is projected to remain strong in 2026. Ghana’s inflation rate fell to 5.4% in December, its lowest since July 2022, marking the 12th straight month of disinflation. The central bank said it will continue to monitor developments closely and take appropriate policy action to ensure that the gains from macroeconomic stability translate into sustainable growth.
2026-01-28
Ghana Delivers Another Steep Cut to Policy Rate
The Bank of Ghana trimmed its benchmark monetary policy rate by another 350 bps to 18% on November 26, 2025, marking the third consecutive rate reduction this year. Policymakers cited an improved macroeconomic outlook and expectations of a continued decline in inflation. Ghana's annual inflation rate fell to an over four-year low of 8% in October 2025, marking the tenth consecutive period of deceleration and aligning with the mid-point of the central bank’s 6%–10% target band. "Inflation has eased faster than we anticipated, and is likely to settle between 4% and 6% by year's end before stabilizing around the target band in 2026,” said Governor Johnson Asiama. Meanwhile, economic growth for the year is projected to remain solid.
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