President John Dramani Mahama has indicated that his administration will not engage in celebrations over Ghana’s completion of its International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme, insisting that the country’s economic recovery remains ongoing. …
President John Dramani Mahama has stated that although Ghana has made significant progress under its International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme, the country’s economy still requires substantial reforms and careful management. …
… On Ghana’s engagement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the President said his administration had succeeded in restoring confidence in the programme after it had veered off-track before the change of government. …
… He referenced earlier assessments by the International Monetary Fund and PwC, which described the banking-sector reforms as necessary measures to restore stability and confidence. …
The Executive Director of the Centre for Policy Scrutiny (CPS), Dr Adu Owusu Sarkodie, has warned that Ghana could return to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) within a few years if the country fails to maintain fiscal discipline and implement structural economic reforms. …
Senegal President Bassirou Diomaye Faye on Friday dismissed Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko and dissolved the government, a move that risks deepening uncertainty in a country already grappling with a debt crisis and drawn-out talks with the International Monetary Fund. …
… Furthermore, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) clarified that the “quasi-fiscal losses” recorded from this programme were simply policy accounting outcomes, not a sign of failure, and emphasized that the DGPP successfully eased pressure on the foreign currency market. …
… Touching on Ghana’s macroeconomic outlook, he said the country had completed the US$3 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) Extended Credit Facility programme and had transitioned to a Policy Coordination Instrument to support fiscal discipline. …
… The International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) have all cautioned against taxing digital payment rails, urging governments instead to use digital infrastructure to improve tax compliance and revenue collection. …
… Ghana has in recent years faced tighter expenditure controls under its International Monetary Fund-supported economic reform program, increasing scrutiny over public spending commitments outside core sectors. …
An opinion article argues that anti-immigrant violence in South Africa, driven by beliefs that foreign nationals displace local workers, threatens the informal traders, migrant entrepreneurs and township supply chains that sustain the country's economy.
An opinion article argues that anti-immigrant violence in South Africa, driven by beliefs that foreign nationals displace local workers, threatens the informal traders, migrant entrepreneurs and township supply chains that sustain the country's economy.
The UK and Japan have agreed a multi-billion-pound investment deal in which Japanese firms will spend more than £9bn on UK infrastructure and financial services and up to £9bn on UK offshore wind, creating tens of thousands of jobs, according to Downing Street.
President Bola Tinubu declared that Nigeria's security forces killed more than 13,000 insurgents over the past year and that insurgency-related deaths have dropped 81 per cent since he took power in 2023. He also noted that 124,000 fighters and dependents have laid down their arms since 2023 through Operation Safe Corridor.
An analysis of global energy dependency on finite fossil fuels and their greenhouse gas emissions, which cause rising sea levels, coastal displacement in Ghana and Africa, and health impacts, argues that sustainable energy transitions are necessary to mitigate climate change.
President Mahama has called for Ghana-EU relations to shift from traditional aid and development assistance toward trade, investment, innovation and industrialisation, with both sides working toward more strategic and equitable relations that promote shared prosperity. Speaking at the opening of the 2026 Ghana-EU Partnership Dialogue in Accra, he cited changing global conditions—including geopolitical tensions, economic uncertainty, climate change and technological disruption—as making strong international partnerships more important.
Augustus Goosie Tanoh, Presidential Advisor on the 24-Hour Economy, appealed to Ghanaians in the United Kingdom to invest in export-driven value chains, transfer technical skills, and partner with local industries as part of the government's economic transformation initiative.
Seven of every ten mobile transactions worldwide occur in Africa, driven by fintech systems like Kenya's M-Pesa (launched 2007), which has expanded from money transfers to utilities, loans, insurance, and government services. Digital platforms like Twiga have also improved agricultural supply chains, reducing crop losses from 30% to 4%.
Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for seven of every ten mobile transactions worldwide. Kenya's M-Pesa system, launched in 2007, pioneered mobile money services and expanded to utilities, loans, government services, and investments, while Kenya's IT infrastructure has spurred digital platforms in agriculture and pharmaceuticals.
The IMF's executive board approved a new $250 million, 38-month extended credit facility for Rwanda to address tighter global financial conditions, with an immediate disbursement of $35.7 million. Rwanda's economy grew 9.4% in 2025 but is expected to slow to below 6.8% in 2026 due to global pressures from the Middle East war, higher oil and fertilizer prices, and resulting inflation.
An opinion piece argues that Ghana's restored macroeconomic stability—including Cedi appreciation, 3.3% inflation, 6% GDP growth, and 45.3% debt-to-GDP ratio in 2025—creates the foundation for a structured partnership between government and business to drive economic transformation.
According to IMF projections, Ghana's GDP is expected to reach $118 billion in 2025, surpassing Côte d'Ivoire's projected $110 billion. The projection marks Ghana's recovery from economic crisis, supported by debt-reduction efforts including a $709 million Eurobond settlement in December.
Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson told Bloomberg he expects inflation will not rise above 5% by the end of the year, though he acknowledges it will rise further from the current 3.4% due to Middle East developments and rising crude prices. The minister also projected Ghana's 2026 growth rate could be higher than the budgeted 4.8% due to developments in the oil and gas sector.
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.
Former Finance Minister Dr Mohammed Amin Adam told Parliament that the government has fallen short of revenue mobilisation targets under the IMF-supported programme, bringing revenue to GDP to 13%, and has failed to reduce borrowing costs despite claims of macroeconomic stability and declining inflation.
Dr Mohammed Amin Adam rejected the current Finance Minister's assertion that Ghana's IMF-supported programme derailed under the Akufo-Addo administration, citing the IMF's Fourth Review report which showed Ghana met all six performance criteria by end of 2024 and three of four indicative targets.
Finance Minister Dr Cassiel Ato Baah Forson told diaspora Ghanaians in London that Ghana is "open for business" and invited them to invest, noting that diaspora remittances exceeded $7 billion last year and describing the diaspora as important partners in nation-building.
Ousted Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko announced his Pastef party will not participate in Senegal's new government after disagreements with President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, complicating negotiations with the International Monetary Fund over a lending programme as the country faces a debt crisis.
An IMANI-PULSE analysis of 10,000 mentions across digital platforms in May 2026 found that Ghanaians' political conversations are increasingly focused on governance outcomes, policy delivery, and accountability rather than political personalities, with policy discussions accounting for 78.2% of classified conversations and an almost neutral overall sentiment score.
Ghana's Court of Appeal unanimously overturned the Bank of Ghana's 2019 revocation of GN Savings & Loans' operating licence, finding the decision unfair and unreasonable. The ruling raises questions about the effectiveness of Ghana's banking regulation following the bank's collapse, which affected hundreds of thousands of savers including market women, farmers and teachers.
President John Dramani Mahama told a diaspora meeting in London that Ghana has emerged as a model for economic recovery, with international development and financial institutions pointing to the country's macro-economic stability and policy reforms as an example for other African nations.
Ghana's tax system is becoming more data-driven, enforcement-oriented and ambitious than ever, according to law firm BELA, driven by the Ghana Revenue Authority's expanding digital capabilities, reforms to value-added tax administration, and transfer pricing enforcement. The government is intensifying domestic revenue mobilisation ahead of the IMF programme's expected conclusion in 2026, with the Integrated Tax Administration System launched on April 1, 2026 automating key tax functions and enabling continuous oversight.
Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson announced that Ghana aims to add 3,000 megawatts of new electricity generation capacity by 2030, with at least 30 percent from renewable energy sources, to address supply-demand gaps and support industrialisation. The target builds on plans for a 1,200-megawatt gas-fired power plant, with current installed capacity at approximately 5,200 megawatts.
Ethiopia's general election takes place on Monday as conflict prevents many people from voting, with the entire northern Tigray region excluded from the poll due to its recovery from a civil war that ended in 2022. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's Prosperity Party is expected to win, with the winning party needing at least 274 of 547 parliamentary seats to form the next government.
Legal practitioner Amanda Clinton said Parliament's passage of the anti-LGBTQI+ bill signals that Ghana's cultural, religious and family values take precedence over concerns about potential economic repercussions from international partners.
The Governor of the Bank of Ghana has announced that cocoa purchases for the 2026/27 crop season will be financed through $1 billion to be raised from the domestic bond market, part of efforts to strengthen Ghana's cocoa financing system and reduce dependence on foreign borrowing.
Ghana's government is spending faster than it is collecting revenue, with cumulative total revenue and grants reaching only 3.6% of GDP and tax revenue at 3.0% of GDP by end of March 2026, against total government expenditure of 3.9% of GDP, making new taxes in the mid-year budget likely.
A University of Ghana economics lecturer has said the recent depreciation of the Ghana cedi is manageable and within acceptable margins compared to historical rates, and that the Bank of Ghana has sufficient reserves and is using a controlled flexibility framework in the forex market.
The Ghana cedi extended its year-to-date loss to 10.11% against the dollar in the interbank market due to demand pressures, closing at GH¢11.63 to a dollar. The central bank's cautious stance on forex intermediation despite IMF assurances of a US$385 million disbursement has contributed to the depreciation, with analysts expecting the cedi to trade within GH¢11.35–11.86 per dollar over the next two weeks.
The Executive Director of the Africa Sustainable Energy Centre has supported calls for private sector participation in the Electricity Company of Ghana's commercial operations, arguing that it would address commercial losses exceeding 30 percent and improve efficiency and accountability through competition in revenue collection.
The Centre for International Maritime Affairs Ghana's executive director has commended Ghana's completion of its IMF Extended Credit Facility programme, saying the exit reflects improved fiscal discipline and restored investor confidence that will benefit maritime, port, and trade operations. He notes that lower inflation and reduced exchange rate volatility will help importers, exporters, and freight forwarders operate with greater efficiency and strengthen Ghana's position as a trade gateway in West Africa.