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Ghana records 11 straight months of falling inflation

Ghana’s inflation rate fell to 6.3 per cent in November 2025, the lowest recorded since the 2021 rebasing of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), deepening the country’s disinflationary trajectory as it marked eleven consecutive months of sustained decline.

The Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) announced the latest figures at a briefing in Accra on Wednesday, with the Government Statistician, Dr Alhassan Iddrisu, describing the continued slowdown as evidence of broad-based stabilisation across the economy.

“Ghana’s inflation has dropped to 6.3% in November 2025, the lowest since the 2021 rebasing and the 11th straight month of decline,” Dr Iddrisu said. He emphasised that the improvement reflected easing pressures in both food and non-food categories, supported by improved domestic supply conditions, reduced fuel-related cost passthrough and stable exchange rate dynamics.

 

Food inflation posted one of the steepest declines, easing sharply from 9.5 per cent in October to 6.6 per cent in November. According to the GSS, the fall was driven by significant declines in inflation for vegetables, tubers, fish and fruits, categories that had previously exerted upward pressure on household budgets. The month-on-month food inflation rate rose marginally to 1.1 per cent following a dip in October, indicating a return to typical seasonal patterns.

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