Ghana Statistical Service — produces official economic data including GDP, inflation, and employment statistics for Ghana, recently reporting 6.4% Q1 2026 growth and 5.8% May producer inflation.
… Headline inflation rose to 3.7 percent year-on-year in May from 3.4 percent in April according to data from Ghana Statistical Service, while month-on-month inflation increased to 1.1 percent from 1 percent. …
… Amoah highlighted ongoing initiatives aimed at strengthening data-driven governance, including data-sharing agreements between the Ghana Statistical Service and 25 Ministries, Departments and Agencies, as well as efforts by the NDPC to integrate Annual Progress Report templates i …
… Alhassan Iddrisu The rate of inflation rose for the second consecutive month in May 2026, climbing to 3.7 percent from 3.4 percent in April, according to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data released by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS). …
… The Ghana Statistical Service’s most recent Quarterly Labour Force Survey puts national unemployment at 13.0 percent in Q3 2025, with youth unemployment for the 15–24 age group at 32.5 percent. …
… lation rose marginally to 3.7 percent in May 2026, marking the second consecutive monthly increase and signalling a slight rebound in price pressures largely driven by higher food costs, according to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data released by Ghana Statistical Service …
Ghana’s inflation rate rose marginally to 3.7 percent in May 2026 from 3.4 percent recorded in April, marking the second consecutive month of increases, according to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data released by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS). …
Fuel prices in Ghana showed mixed movements in May 2026, as global oil market shocks gradually filtered into domestic pricing, according to the Ghana Statistical Service. …
… Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, MP for Ofoase Ayeribi and Ranking Member on Parliament’s Economy and Development Committee, told colleagues that youth unemployment now stands at 40 percent, according to the Ghana Statistical Service Quarterly Labour Force Survey for the third quarter of 202 …
… According to the Ghana Statistical Service, approximately 12.5 million Ghanaians were estimated to be food insecure in 2025, with a national food insecurity prevalence rate of 38 percent. …
On the twentieth anniversary of Ghana's Persons with Disability Act 2006, an article reflects on how persons with disability continue to face daily barriers in accessing basic services and navigating public spaces designed without their needs in mind.
On the twentieth anniversary of Ghana's Persons with Disability Act 2006, an article reflects on how persons with disability continue to face daily barriers in accessing basic services and navigating public spaces designed without their needs in mind.
Producer inflation climbed to 5.8% in May 2026 from 2.7% in April, driven mainly by rising costs in mining and quarrying, manufacturing, and transport sectors, according to the Ghana Statistical Service. Mining and quarrying inflation jumped from 5.6% in April to 11.0% in May.
Producer Price Inflation surged to 5.8% in May 2026 from 2.7% in April, with Mining and Quarrying — the largest sub-sector — driving much of the increase from 5.6% to 11.0%. The Ghana Statistical Service attributed emerging upward pressure on input costs and advised households and businesses to monitor price movements and adjust purchasing strategies accordingly.
Ghana's economy grew 6.4 percent in the first quarter of 2026, led by the Services sector (7.1%), but citizens across households, markets and workplaces report unbearable food prices, rising rent, expensive transport fares, and declining business sales despite official economic recovery claims.
The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) has warned of a child labour crisis forcing thousands of Ghanaian children out of school and into economic hardship. According to CHRAJ, the relentless demand for cheap youth labour continues to deprive many children of their right to education, protection, and a safe childhood.
The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice has called for renewed national and global commitment to eliminate child labour, warning that millions of children continue to be denied their rights to education, protection and a safe childhood as Ghana marks the 2026 World Day Against Child Labour.
Twenty years after Ghana's Persons with Disability Act 2006 (Act 715), persons with disability still face significant barriers in accessing basic services and public spaces such as transport, banks, hospitals, and government offices. The article argues that disability is not a minority issue but a human rights concern requiring genuine implementation of existing protections.
Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, Ranking Member on Parliament's Economy and Development Committee, has unveiled a five-point strategy to address Ghana's youth unemployment crisis, warning that current interventions are failing. According to Ghana Statistical Service data, unemployment among persons aged 15 to 24 rose from 32 per cent in December 2024 to 32.5 per cent by the third quarter of 2025, with nearly two million young Ghanaians neither in education, employment, nor training.
The Ghana Meteorological Agency has proposed a new legislative framework to transform itself into the Ghana Meteorological Authority, with expanded regulatory powers to license meteorological operators, establish standards, and become the sole official source of national severe weather warnings and public safety alerts.
Ofoase-Ayirebi MP Kojo Oppong Nkrumah raised concern in Parliament about rising youth unemployment, citing Ghana Statistical Service data showing 32.5 per cent unemployment among those aged 15–24 in Q3 2025, and 49.3 per cent in Greater Accra, with 1.95 million young Ghanaians classified as NEET under the broader age-35 definition.
Government Statistician Dr Alhassan Iddrisu says charcoal prices have risen more than 50% over the past year, making it the single biggest driver of inflation in Ghana. Food inflation also rose to 3.3% in May 2026 from 2.2% in April, with food prices jumping 2% in a single month and tomato prices surging 38.8% between April and May 2026 alone.
Former Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah called on Parliament Thursday for the government to address rising youth unemployment with measurable interventions including published delivery scorecards, skills training separated from job creation, and public-private partnerships rather than political slogans and promises.
MP Kojo Oppong Nkrumah called for a fundamental rethink of Ghana's youth employment strategy, warning that skills training without job opportunities creates frustration. He proposed measures including published delivery scorecards for job programmes, separate funding for skills development and job creation, and a shift toward private sector involvement.
Ghana's economy grew 6.4% in the first quarter of 2026, up from 6.2% in the same period last year, with strong performance in services, mining, and oil and gas. The analysis notes that while the growth is broad-based and resilient, services-led growth must be complemented by stronger industrial expansion and manufacturing for sustained development.
Ghana's economy expanded by 6.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2026, up from 6.2 per cent a year earlier, largely driven by mining and quarrying and information and communication technology. The Ghana Statistical Service noted the acceleration was accompanied by a sharp easing of price pressures, with the GDP deflator declining from 23.9 per cent to 4.1 per cent.
Ghana's economy expanded 6.4 percent in Q1 2026, driven by services and mining sectors, according to Ghana Statistical Service provisional estimates. The growth rate slightly outpaced Q1 2025's 6.2 percent, supported by rising domestic demand and investment activity, while the GDP deflator fell sharply to 4.1 percent from 23.9 percent, signalling easing inflationary pressures.
Ghana's GDP expanded by 6.4 percent in the first quarter of 2026, up from 6.2 percent a year earlier, with the Services sector accounting for 48.3 percent of overall GDP growth, driven by ICT expansion of 25.2 percent, while Mining and Quarrying grew by 10.7 percent.
Ghana's GDP expanded 6.4% in the first quarter of 2026, up from 6.2% a year earlier, with the Services sector driving growth at 7.1% and accounting for 48.3% of overall GDP growth. The Industry sector accelerated to 6.9%, boosted by Mining and Quarrying (10.7%) and Oil and Gas (7.0%), while Agriculture grew 4.0% despite a sharp 18.5% decline in Fishing.
The Greater Accra Regional Minister and officials directed traders and hawkers at Lapaz to vacate pavements and road medians, citing safety risks and traffic congestion, and gave them a seven-day ultimatum to relocate to designated markets or face enforcement action. The Okaikwei North MCE stated traders would be permitted to operate only on weekends, from Friday to Sunday.
The Ghana Statistical Service plans to introduce rebased GDP and Consumer Price Index figures by mid-2027 to provide more accurate economic indicators and reflect current consumption patterns, contingent on timely funding from the Ministry of Finance.
Ghana's headline inflation rose to 3.7 percent year-on-year in May from 3.4 percent in April, driven by food, energy, and imported cost pressures, narrowing the case for further monetary easing by the Bank of Ghana despite inflation remaining below its medium-term target band.
The Director-General of the National Development Planning Commission has called for greater reliance on data and evidence in policymaking and public service delivery, arguing that Ghana's development agenda must be guided by credible information. She highlighted data-sharing agreements between the Ghana Statistical Service and 25 Ministries, Departments and Agencies, and warned that public trust could be undermined if data systems exclude vulnerable groups or fail to protect personal information.
Ghana's inflation rate climbed to 3.7 percent in May 2026 from 3.4 percent in April, marking the second consecutive monthly increase. Despite the recent uptick, the Government Statistician noted that inflation has fallen significantly from 18.4 percent a year ago, easing pressure on household budgets.
Ghana has restored macroeconomic stability but faces persistent labour-market weakness, with national unemployment at 13.0 percent and youth unemployment at 32.5 percent in Q3 2025. The NDPC Chairman has called for a "3D Growth" framework that assesses economic performance by three coequal dimensions — GDP, jobs, and wages — arguing that growth without jobs and rising incomes is meaningless and unsustainable.
Consumer inflation in Ghana rose to 3.7 percent in May 2026, marking the second consecutive monthly increase, largely driven by higher food costs, according to data from Ghana Statistical Service. Food and non-alcoholic beverages inflation accelerated to 3.3 percent from 2.2 percent in April, contributing 38 percent to overall inflation.
Ghana's inflation rate increased to 3.7 percent in May 2026 from 3.4 percent in April, the second consecutive monthly rise, though the Government Statistician noted the outlook remains significantly improved compared to 18.4 percent in May 2025. Food inflation drove the increase, rising from 2.2 percent to 3.3 percent, while non-food inflation eased slightly to 4.1 percent.
Fuel prices in Ghana showed mixed movements in May 2026 as global oil shocks filtered into domestic pricing, but transport fares remained subdued, with taxi fares declining 4.9% year-on-year and bus and truck fares falling 6.6%, according to the Ghana Statistical Service. The government's suspension and partial withdrawal of selected petroleum levies has also contributed to price stability, though analysts caution that delayed transport fare adjustments could affect inflation dynamics.
Ghana's year-on-year inflation increased to 3.7% in May 2026 from 3.4% in April, marking a second consecutive monthly rise. Despite the recent increase, inflation has fallen sharply from 18.4% a year ago, significantly easing pressure on household budgets.
Ranking Member Kojo Oppong Nkrumah told Parliament that youth unemployment stands at 40 percent according to the Ghana Statistical Service, citing higher rates in Greater Accra at 49.3 percent, and argued the jobs crisis is the defining economic reality for most of the country despite government claims of economic stability.
The Hunger Project Ghana commemorated World Hunger Day 2026 at Asenema Epicenter in the Eastern Region, bringing together over 100 community partners and district leaders. The event featured training on Celemix, a nutritious locally-sourced meal designed to address child malnutrition while creating economic opportunities for women.