Ghana’s economy is showing renewed strength, raising expectations that the government could revise its official growth target upward when the Mid-Year Budget Review is presented in July 2026.
Fresh projections by leading investment research firm IC Insights suggest that Ghana is on course to achieve a robust Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rate of 6.4% ± 0.5 percentage points in 2026. The optimistic forecast follows an impressive first quarter economic performance that exceeded expectations and signaled that the country’s recovery is becoming broader and more sustainable.
The latest outlook comes as policymakers continue efforts to stabilize the economy after years of high inflation, currency volatility, and global economic shocks. The latest data suggests those efforts are beginning to produce stronger results across multiple sectors of the economy.
Strong first quarter boosts confidence
According to IC Insights, Ghana’s economy expanded by 6.4% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2026, slightly higher than the 6.2% growth recorded during the same period in 2025.
The strong performance has strengthened confidence that Ghana could significantly outperform the government’s current full year growth target of 4.8%.
IC Insights maintained its optimistic position, stating:
“Overall, we view Ghana’s 1Q2026 [quarter one 2026] real GDP growth as an early indication of another year of trend growth, outperforming the authorities’ below-trend target of 4.8%. We thus maintain our FY2026 overall growth forecast of 6.4% ± 0.5pp and expect the authorities to raise their target during the mid-year budget review in July 2026”.
IC Insights
If the government revises its growth forecast upward, it would reinforce growing investor confidence that Ghana’s economic recovery has entered a stronger and more resilient phase.
Industry powers impressive expansion
The industrial sector emerged as one of the strongest contributors to economic growth during the opening quarter of 2026.
Industry recorded an impressive 6.9% growth compared to 4.1% during the same period last year. This sharp improvement reflects stronger activity across manufacturing and other productive sectors that continue to benefit from improving business conditions.
Although Agriculture and Services posted mixed performances compared to last year, both sectors continued to contribute significantly to overall economic expansion. Agriculture recorded 4.0% growth while Services expanded by 7.1%, compared to 6.6% and 7.4% respectively during the first quarter of 2025.
The broad-based nature of the expansion suggests that Ghana’s recovery is no longer relying solely on extractive industries.
Consumer spending and digital economy drive growth
IC Insights believes the services sector continues to be the biggest engine powering Ghana’s economic recovery.
According to the research firm:
“We note a strong rebound in trades sub-sector to 9.0% in 1Q2026 (vs 3.3% in 1Q2025) while ICT expanded by 25.2% year-on-year from 13.1% a year earlier. Transport & haulage activities also grew strongly by 13.0% y/y, surging from 8.4% in the corresponding quarter of 2025”.
IC Insights
The report highlights how stronger household spending, rapid digitalisation, and increased business activity have combined to stimulate growth across several service industries.
The Information and Communication Technology sector remained one of the fastest-growing segments of the economy, reflecting Ghana’s accelerating digital transformation and increasing adoption of technology across businesses and households.

Falling inflation fuels household confidence
One of the biggest factors behind the improved economic performance has been the dramatic decline in inflation.
IC Insights explained that lower inflation has strengthened purchasing power, encouraging consumers, businesses, and government institutions to spend more confidently.
“In our opinion, the trades sector reflects the benefits of subdued consumer price growth as inflation fell sharply to 3.2% in March 2026 (vs 22.4% in March 2025). The boost in consumer spending was visible across households, government, and the business sector.”
IC Insights
The sharp fall in inflation represents one of Ghana’s most significant macroeconomic achievements in recent years and has created a more stable environment for investment and economic activity.
Cocoa slowdown remains a concern
Despite the encouraging national outlook, challenges remain within the agricultural sector.
IC Insights observed that weaker performance in cocoa production and fishing slowed overall agricultural growth during the first quarter.
The report noted:
“We observed a significant slowdown in cocoa sector growth to 3.8% year-on-year in 1Q2026 despite the authorities’ proposed measures to revive the sector. That said, we attribute a significant part of the slowdown to a high base effect from last year as the sub-sector expanded by 23.1% in 1Q2025. The growth outturn suggests to us that the Ghanaian cocoa sector”.
Even so, the research firm believes the outlook for cocoa remains positive over the remainder of the year.
It expects the sector to return to stronger growth as government prepares to launch a US$1.0 billion cedi denominated domestic bond before August 2026 to support cocoa purchases and strengthen the industry’s recovery.
Outlook remains highly optimistic
With economic activity strengthening across industry, services, consumer spending, and digital transformation, Ghana appears well positioned to exceed official expectations in 2026.
Should current momentum continue, analysts believe the Mid-Year Budget Review could become a defining moment, with government potentially raising its growth target to reflect the economy’s stronger than expected performance.
For investors, businesses, and consumers, the latest projections offer renewed optimism that Ghana’s recovery is becoming firmly established, supported by improving macroeconomic fundamentals and expanding opportunities across key sectors.
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