In the early months of 2025, Ghana’s cedi enjoyed a remarkable recovery—jumping more than 40% against the US dollar and being hailed as Africa’s best-performing currency. From a low near ₵15.5/USD in April, the cedi strengthened to around ₵10.3/USD by June, easing Ghana’s debt burden and bolstering fiscal space. The rebound was driven by high gold and cocoa export earnings, progress on IMF-backed debt restructuring, tight monetary policy, robust remittance flows, and disciplined central bank FX auctions.
Analysts welcomed this recovery—GDP growth was gaining traction, inflation fell to approximately 18.4% in May (its lowest since early 2022), and foreign exchange reserves strengthened. These indicators prompted calls from central bank Governor Johnson Asiama for the Monetary Policy Committee to carefully consider easing support measures to sustain economic momentum without sacrificing stability.
However, fresh data in late July 2025 suggest mounting risks. Traders and financial analysts now forecast that the cedi may face renewed pressure in the coming week. Rising FX demand—especially from the energy and manufacturing sectors—is coinciding with slower supply, even as central bank interventions persist. As a result, the cedi is expected to remain volatile. Current trading hovers near ₵10.40 to the dollar, a slight retreat from its recent highs yet supported by daily central bank auctions and healthy reserves exceeding IMF targets.
Continued fiscal caution is crucial—Ghana’s public debt remains elevated, and unfinished structural reforms create vulnerability. Should demand outpace daily FX supply or investor sentiment shift, the cedi could depreciate. A weaker currency risks raising import costs, stoking inflation, and undermining hard-won macroeconomic gains.
In short, while the cedi’s recovery has been impressive, recent warnings illustrate that the rally may have peaked for now. As July unfolds, policymakers and markets must navigate a balancing act: preserving stability without choking off the support that enabled this recovery. The main question remains—can Ghana manage resurgent FX demand without compromising its recovering economic trajectory?
Credit: Al Jazeera




