By Adnan Adams Mohammed
International ratings agency Fitch has downgraded its 2026 global economic growth forecast to 2.4%, down 0.2 percentage points from its previous estimate, citing the severe inflationary pressures and trade disruptions caused by the ongoing US-Iran conflict.
Central to the revised outlook is a sharp escalation in energy costs, with Fitch boosting its 2026 average price assumption for Brent crude to $87 per barrel, up from the $70 benchmark projected earlier this year. The agency attributes the adjustment to the prolonged 14-week closure of the critical Strait of Hormuz shipping lane, which analysts do not expect to begin reopening until July.
“The oil price shock is hitting world growth prospects and increasing downside risks,” stated Brian Coulton, Chief Economist at Fitch Ratings, in the agency’s June Global Economic Outlook report. “Forecast cuts have been widespread as higher inflation squeezes real wages, dampens consumption, and raises companies’ input costs.”
The downgraded global growth trend poses significant fiscal hurdles for emerging markets, particularly net oil-importing nations facing a dual onslaught of higher importing bills and tightened global credit conditions. Under a worse-case scenario modeled by Fitch where crude spikes to $100 per barrel growth indicators for major economies could plummet further, heavily disrupting global trade dynamics.
BoG Defends National Resilience
In a swift counter to growing domestic anxieties over the ripple effects of the international energy crisis, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has mounted a robust defense of the local economy. Management contends that deliberate, defensive monetary policies executed over the past year have successfully insulated Ghana from the worst of the external shocks.
Speaking at the 10th Ghana CEO Summit in Accra, the Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Johnson Pandit Asiama, insisted that Ghana is structurally equipped to withstand the global oil volatility without suffering catastrophic macroeconomic slippages.
“Ghana’s ability to cushion the impact of recent economic shocks triggered by escalating tensions in the Middle East is the result of deliberate efforts to build strong international reserves,” Dr. Asiama declared to industry executives. “Through disciplined policy implementation, inflation has moderated significantly. Exchange rate conditions have stabilized, reserves have strengthened considerably, and confidence has rebounded in the economy.”
Dr. Asiama revealed that aggressive domestic reserve accumulation programmes implemented throughout late 2025 have provided the central bank with the exact strategic depth required to navigate the current global supply chain bottlenecks.
“The current global crisis validates the central bank’s decision to build up reserves,” the Governor noted. “That is why we are able to stem the impact of the ongoing crisis even better than some of our peer countries, all because we built the reserves and we built resilience.”
Guarding Against Complacency
Despite the confident outlook, the central bank cautioned market actors against complacency. The persistent closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to exert latent pressure on global logistics, meaning import-reliant business models will still face elevated input costs over the short term.
“Stability must never be taken for granted,” Dr. Asiama warned. “The recent geopolitical tensions in the Middle East remind us that the global environment remains highly uncertain.”
Fitch’s analytical teams noted that while the oil crisis is a formidable headwind to global GDP expansion, the broader economic fallout is being partially softened by unprecedented, high-momentum investment in artificial intelligence and corporate IT infrastructure, which is keeping world trade afloat.
For Ghana, the coming months will test the limits of the central bank’s reserves. The state must successfully deploy its built-up buffers to maintain exchange rate stability and anchor domestic price expectations, preventing the international $87-a-barrel crude pricing pressure from triggering a fresh wave of domestic inflation.
