Fiscal Performance - The fiscal performance for the 2025 fiscal year significantly exceeded expectations, with an overall fiscal deficit of 1.0% of GDP, better than the target of 2.8% [1] - The primary fiscal surplus was 2.6%, surpassing the planned surplus of 1.5% [1] - The cash-based overall fiscal deficit narrowed to 3.1% of GDP, better than the target of 3.8% [1] - The cash-based primary fiscal surplus was 0.5%, contrasting with the previously expected deficit of 0.5% [1] Debt Reduction - The total public debt is set to decrease by 82.1 billion Ghanaian Cedi, from 726.7 billion Cedi (61.8% of GDP) in December 2024 to 641.0 billion Cedi (45.3% of GDP) by December 2025, marking one of the largest reductions in the country's history [1] Economic Growth and Inflation - The actual GDP growth for the first three quarters of 2025 was 6.1% year-on-year [1] - Inflation rates have decreased for 13 consecutive months, dropping from 23.5% in January 2025 to 3.8% in January 2026, a decline of 19.7% [1] Interest Rates - The 91-day treasury bill rate fell from 27.7% at the end of 2024 to 11% by December 2025, with a further reduction to 6.5% expected by February 2026 [2] - The average commercial bank lending rate decreased from 30.25% in 2024 to 20.45% in 2025 [2] Private Sector Credit and Currency Strength - Private sector credit increased by 17.1 billion Ghanaian Cedi in 2025, with expectations for continued growth in 2026 [3] - The Ghanaian Cedi appreciated against the US dollar by 40.7% by the end of December 2025, reversing a 19.2% depreciation in 2024 [3] - The Cedi also strengthened against the British Pound by 30.9% and the Euro by 24.0% [3]
加纳政府债务减少821亿塞地
Shang Wu Bu Wang Zhan·2026-02-24 16:15