The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Ghana keeps policy rate unchanged to curb inflation

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GHANA'S inflation has experience­d a dramatic turnaround, from 38,1 percent in September 2023 to a 14-month low of 35,2 percent in October.

What the Bank of Ghana said: "There is a need to keep the policy rate tighter for longer until inflation is firmly anchored on a downward trajectory towards the medium-term target," the Bank of Ghana said in a monetary policy statement.

“The committee noted that though inflation is decelerati­ng, it remains high relative to target. Therefore there is a need to keep the policy rate tighter for longer until inflation is firmly anchored on a downward trajectory towards the medium-term target. Given these considerat­ions, the committee decided to maintain the monetary policy rate at 30 percent”

The last 2 years for Ghana have been tumultuous. Regarded as one of its worst economic periods in over 2 decades, Ghanaians, since 2022 have been subjected to varying levels of financial stress as a result of the country's economic shortcomin­gs.

Earlier in the month, the country was reportedly exploring a US$400 million loan from cocoa traders to fund its industry operations as the government is facing difficulti­es in securing an annual loan from internatio­nal banks due to ongoing government debt restructur­ing.

But Ghana has received the first tranche of an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund US$3 billion lending programme and expects to get another after a meeting of the Fund's executive board before the end of the year. The African Developmen­t Bank Group has also granted US$102,59 million in budget support to the Ghanaian government for its Fiscal Consolidat­ion and Economic Recovery Program.

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