The Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has kept the policy rate unchanged at 16 per cent.
This is the sixth time the policy rate has been maintained at 16% since last year.
Speaking to the media at a news conference Friday, the Governor of the BoG, Dr Ernest Addison said the decision was as a result of some threats to the country’s economic growth and inflation outlook.
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He said the current appreciation of the cedi in the first month of this year had to do with some monetary interventions by the BoG and improved supply of dollars in the economy.
He said “the key risks to the global growth outlook are geopolitical tensions between the United States (US) and Iran and worsening of relations between the US and its trading partners with the rising threat of protectionism and vulnerabilities in emerging markets.
“The outbreak of the Coronavirus poses a new risk to the global economy and its impact is yet to be assessed. The Brexit finally takes effect today and is not expected to adversely affect the global economic outlook.”
Cedi’s depreciation
According to Dr Addison “the Ghana cedi depreciated by 12.9 percent against the US dollar in 2019, compared to 8.4 percent depreciation in 2018. Against the British pound and Euro, the Ghana cedi cumulatively depreciated by 15.7 and 11.2 percent respectively, compared to 3.3 and 3.9 percent over the same period in 2018.”
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By January 29, 2020, the Ghana cedi had recovered, appreciating by 0.3 percent compared with a depreciation of 2.5 percent in the same period of 2019.
Inflation
On the domestic front, headline inflation has remained in single digits since June 2018 and more recently remained steady around the central path of 8.0 percent. The two readings since the last MPC meeting showed that inflation increased to 8.2 percent in November from 7.7 percent in October 2019 due to upward adjustment in some administrative prices.
However, it declined to 7.9 percent in December 2019 on the back of lower food prices amidst stable non-food prices. Alongside these trends, the various measures of underlying inflation remained well-contained and the Bank’s core inflation (defined to exclude energy and utility) has declined since June 2019, supported by well-anchored inflation expectations.
Growth in the key monetary aggregates firmed up in 2019, driven largely by increased accumulation of net foreign assets by the BoG.
Broad money supply (M2+) recorded an annual growth of 21.6 percent on December 3, 2019 compared with 15.4 percent a year ago. The increase was mainly reflected in increased deposits, signifying deposit flight to quality, as the clean-up process boosted a return to confidence in the banking sector.