By Adnan Adams Mohammed
Ghana’s economy is currently operating in two speeds: a blistering start to the year that is now cooling into a more sustainable, albeit cautious, recovery.
As international observers and credit rating agencies turn their gaze toward the West African powerhouse, a complex picture is emerging. It is a narrative of ambitious World Bank targets, cooling inflationary pressures, and the sobering reality of a growth rate that is beginning to find its floor.
The most optimistic signal for the medium term comes from the World Bank’s latest projections. The Bretton Woods institution has forecasted that Ghana’s GDP growth will hit 4.8% by 2026. Perhaps more significantly for the average Ghanaian household, the bank projects that inflation, which has battered purchasing power over the last three years, will end the year at a single-digit of 9%.
This “9% by 26” target represents more than just a number; it is a signal of a return to macroeconomic normalcy. If achieved, it would mark the definitive end of the hyper-inflationary cycle that saw prices of basic goods double and triple in recent years.
January growth at 7.5%
However, the path to the 2026 stability is proving to be non-linear. New data indicates that economic growth was 7.5% in January 2026. While a 7.5% growth rate remains enviable by global standards, the “slowdown” from January 2025’s 8.2% suggests that the initial post-recovery surge, driven by a rebound in mining and services, may be leveling off.
Analysts suggest this cooling is a natural consequence of tighter monetary policy. The Bank of Ghana’s efforts to mop up excess liquidity to fight inflation have inevitably kept the cost of borrowing for the private sector well above the inflation rate, leading to a slight deceleration in industrial expansion.
S&P: Stability amidst the storm
Amidst these fluctuating growth figures, the global credit rating agency S&P Global Ratings has maintained a “Stable” outlook for Ghana. This is a crucial “seal of approval” for a country still navigating the complexities of post-debt restructuring.
S&P’s assessment acknowledges that while the economy is showing “clear signs of recovery,” significant risks persist. The agency points to Ghana’s high debt-servicing costs and the volatility of global commodity prices, specifically gold and oil, as the primary “known unknowns” that could derail the current trajectory.
The “Stable” rating serves as a double-edged sword: it recognizes the government’s disciplined fiscal consolidation under the current IMF program, but it also warns that there is very little room for populist spending or policy slippage.
The outlook
As we look toward the second half of 2026, the Ghanaian economy is entering what economists call the “sticky middle.” The low-hanging fruit of recovery, such as reopening shuttered factories and stabilizing the Cedi, has largely been harvested.
The next phase of growth will be harder to earn. Achieving the World Bank’s 4.8% target will require a shift from “stability” to “structural transformation.” This means moving beyond a reliance on raw material exports and fostering a domestic manufacturing base that can withstand external shocks.
For the man on the street, the 9% inflation target is the only metric that truly matters. Until the cost of kenkey, transport, and rent aligns with those single-digit projections, the “recovery” will remain a statistical reality rather than a felt one.
With S&P maintaining a steady hand and the World Bank pointing toward a brighter 2026, the blueprint for success is clear. However, the question remains: can the nation maintain the fiscal discipline required to cross the finish line?
