Bank of Ghana Holds Interest Rates

Ghana’s inflation will fall faster towards government targets than expected, the head of the central bank said on Monday, raising prospects of a cycle of interest rate cuts as it held benchmark borrowing costs at 26.0 percent.

Inflation much higher than in comparable African economies, has dogged Ghana for years, a symptom of a broader economic crisis that emerged in 2013 with falling commodity prices, forcing the government to seek financing from the International Monetary Fund, which prescribed an austerity programme last year.

While Ghana’s broad measure of consumer price inflation rose to 16.9 percent in August, having dropped from 19.2 percent since March, Reuters quoted the Bank’s Governor Abdul-Nashiru Issahaku, to have said core inflation – which excludes energy and utility prices – had continued to fall.
Issahaku said inflation would hit the bank’s target of 8 percent, plus or minus two percentage points, by the second quarter of 2017 rather than the third as previously forecast.

Business leaders and commercial banks say the ultra-high benchmark rate distorts the economy and inhibits growth. Issahaku said the “substantial” fall in inflation would pull rates lower.
“It’s a bitter pill we are swallowing right now to ensure that stability returns to the economy,” he told a news conference after a policy meeting.

“The (rate-setting) committee noted the moderation in headline inflation since the July meeting on the back of continued cedi stability, easing inflation pressures and tight credit conditions.”

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