Fitch predicts 5.0% growth rate for Ghana in 20226

Fitch Ratings is predicting in its latest report a growth rate of 5.0% for Ghana in 2026.

This is lower than the 5.9% Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rate achieved in 2025.

Its rating is based on the Middle East war, which has reached another dimension.

The UK-based firm disclosed that Sub-Saharan African (SSA) sovereigns face the external shock precipitated by the US-Iran war from a stronger starting point than when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

It said improvements to monetary, fiscal and macroeconomic policy settings and metrics have enhanced the region’s resilience, but the war’s impact will test its depth and durability.

Key transmission channels are higher costs for energy imports, possible supply shortages (notably of refined oil products and fertilizer, domestic inflationary pressures, and the cost of fiscal support measures.

Fitch predicts 5.0% growth rate for Ghana in 20226

“Our baseline forecasts are for real GDP [Gross Domestic Product] to grow in all Fitch-rated SSA sovereigns this year, with the median of 4% unchanged from 2025. But some oil importers are exposed to a supply shock, which may be exacerbated by efforts to prevent the full pass-through of international fuel price moves incentivising speculative hoarding and artificially boosting demand”, it said.

Headline inflation is rising, but Fitch said often from a fairly low base, reflecting greater currency stability. “Central banks are well positioned to respond as most are running positive real policy rates, despite cuts pre-war facilitated by the previously subdued inflation backdrop”.

External Positions Stronger than in 2022

It continued that external positions are generally stronger than in 2022, with narrower current account deficits in several sovereigns and reserves of at least three months of current external payments.

It added that greater exchange-rate flexibility has also boosted resilience to shocks in some sovereigns. High prices for some export commodities can offset higher energy prices, depending on the composition of trade.

“Revenue mobilisation efforts and subsidy reforms have strengthened public finances since 2022, but political and social pressures were, to varying degrees, already a constraint on fiscal adjustment. Fiscal measures to ease the pass-through of energy prices have been widespread, but generally time-limited and small”, it concluded.

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