In what many are calling a historic financial rebound, Ghana’s Finance Minister, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson, has announced that the Ghana cedi has posted its strongest performance in the country’s modern economic history.
Speaking during the 2025 Mid-Year Budget Review in Parliament, Dr. Forson boldly declared that the nation had achieved a feat few believed possible — a complete reversal of the cedi’s downward spiral over the past three years. “Mr. Speaker, this level of appreciation has never happened in the history of our country,” he told a packed chamber, his words met with applause from the government benches.
In 2022, 2023, and 2024, the cedi suffered unprecedented levels of depreciation. At its worst, it traded at GH¢17 to the US dollar and GH¢21 to the British Pound. Many businesses folded, importers struggled, and consumer confidence plummeted. But as of July 23, 2025, the tables have turned dramatically. The cedi now trades at GH¢10.4 to the dollar and GH¢14.1 to the Pound — a 42.6% appreciation against the dollar, 30.3% against the pound, and 25.6% against the euro since January 2025.
“This is a significant reversal compared to same period in 2024 when the Cedi depreciated by 18.6%, 17.9%, and 16.0%, respectively.”
Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson
Dr. Forson attributes this sharp appreciation to deliberate, strategic reforms implemented by the Mahama-led administration since assuming office in January.
Rebuilding Trust in the Cedi
Among the key drivers of the turnaround is macroeconomic stability. The government has implemented stricter fiscal discipline, improved transparency in public finances, and restructured monetary policy coordination with the Bank of Ghana.
The Finance Minister also cited increased foreign exchange inflows from a combination of diaspora investments, rising cocoa export earnings, and greater confidence from development partners. “We have brought back clarity, certainty, stability, and purpose to our economic policy direction,” Dr. Forson said.
Indeed, investors seem to be taking notice. Treasury yields have fallen, reflecting lower inflation expectations, while foreign direct investment inquiries have reportedly surged since Q2 2025. A stronger cedi also translates into lower import costs, reduced fuel and transportation prices, and a general easing of inflationary pressure on households and businesses.
Analysts at Vaultz News suggest that the government’s credible policy signals and transparency may have reassured financial markets that Ghana is once again a safe bet.
Despite the celebration, some economists remain cautious. They warn that currency appreciation alone is not a silver bullet. Structural issues — such as Ghana’s dependency on imports, a narrow export base, and limited industrial productivity — must still be addressed.
“There is no doubt the gains are impressive,” said an economist. “But we must ensure this isn’t a one-off recovery. We need sustainable policies anchored in industrialisation and value-added exports.”
Still, the Finance Minister is optimistic. The government is expected to soon launch an export diversification drive, as well as further digitise tax administration to widen the revenue net.
As Dr. Forson put it, “The signs of recovery are obvious, evident, noticeable, visible, tangible — and they are being felt.”
Indeed, for a currency once written off as a casualty of poor policy and external shocks, the Ghana cedi’s renaissance is not just a fiscal story — it’s a national comeback tale.
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