- Ghana's central bank surprised analysts on Monday by raising its main interest rate to 29.5%.
- This means that the monetary committee does not yet see the country's economic situation stabilizing despite two months of slower inflation.
- Ghana is currently trying to restructure its debt in order to get a $3 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.
Ghana's central bank surprised analysts on Monday by raising its main interest rate to 29.5%, indicating that the monetary committee does not yet see the country's economic situation stabilizing despite two months of slower inflation.
Ghana, one of West Africa's most lucrative economies, is experiencing its worst financial crisis in the last 2 decades and is restructuring its debt in order to get a $3 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.
In an effort to limit spiraling price surges, the central bank has raised its primary lending rate by 12.5 percentage points in the last year, from 17% in March 2022 to 54.1% in December.