16/12/2025
Ghana’s Inflation at 6.3%: Good News, but Not Time to Relax Yet
As an economist, the news that Ghana’s year-on-year inflation declined to 6.3% in November 2025 is undoubtedly encouraging. It represents a dramatic improvement from 23.0% in November 2024, bringing inflation back into single digits within just one year. This reflects the combined effects of tight monetary policy, fiscal consolidation, and some stabilization in macroeconomic conditions. However, beneath this positive headline lies a more nuanced story that deserves careful attention.
First, while year-on-year inflation has fallen sharply, the monthly inflation rate of 0.9% shows that prices are still rising. This matters because sustained monthly increases at this pace could slow or even reverse the disinflation process over time. Monthly inflation close to 1% often signals lingering demand pressures, fuel price effects, or seasonal food supply challenges. For policymakers, this means that inflation has moderated, but it has not been fully defeated, and any premature relaxation of policy could be costly.
Food inflation remains another key concern. At 6.6%, it is still higher than non-food inflation, which stands at 6.1%. This confirms that food prices continue to be the dominant source of cost pressure for households. Since food accounts for a large share of consumption, especially among low-income and informal-sector households, even modest food price increases can significantly affect welfare. Falling headline inflation therefore does not automatically translate into improved living standards for everyone, particularly the poor.
A striking feature of the November 2025 data is the wide regional disparity in inflation. Inflation ranged from –0.02% in the Savannah Region to as high as 12.2% in the North East Region, with eight regions recording inflation above the national average. Such large differences suggest deep structural issues, including weak market integration, high transport and logistics costs, localized supply shocks, and security challenges in some areas. This implies that a one-size-fits-all national policy may have uneven and sometimes limited effectiveness across regions.
There is also a broader macroeconomic trade-off to consider. The rapid disinflation achieved over the past months has likely been supported by tight fiscal consolidation and restrictive monetary policy. While this has helped stabilize prices, prolonged tight conditions risk constraining credit, private investment, and job creation, particularly for small and medium-sized enterprises. Without timely policy rebalancing, Ghana could drift into a low inflation–low growth situation, which would undermine long-term development.
Going forward, policy must strike a careful balance. On the monetary side, the Bank of Ghana should proceed with gradual and data-driven easing, rather than aggressive rate cuts, until monthly inflation shows clearer and more sustained moderation. Attention should shift toward core and services inflation, not just the headline figure. On the fiscal side, as inflation eases, policy should move away from blunt austerity toward growth-friendly consolidation, protecting productive spending in agriculture, energy, and transport while improving efficiency rather than simply cutting expenditures.
Tackling food inflation requires structural, supply-side solutions, not price controls. Investments in irrigation, storage, warehousing, and market access roads can reduce post-harvest losses and stabilize food prices over time. Similarly, the large regional inflation gaps call for targeted, region-sensitive interventions, particularly in northern Ghana, including improved logistics, strategic buffer stock releases, and security-enhanced market access.
Finally, sustaining low inflation will depend critically on exchange rate stability. Strengthening foreign exchange buffers through export diversification, remittance facilitation, and credible implementation of debt restructuring is essential to lock in current gains and protect real incomes.
In conclusion, the November 2025 CPI Bulletin reflects a remarkable macroeconomic stabilization effort, with inflation falling from crisis levels to single digits in just one year. Yet, persistent monthly inflation, sticky food prices and sharp regional disparities remind us that this progress remains fragile. The policy challenge now is to move beyond crisis control toward inclusive and sustainable price stability that supports growth, jobs, and improved welfare for all Ghanaians