- Ghana reference rate falls to 10% as easing cycle gains traction
Ghana’s benchmark lending rate has dropped to 10% for April 2026, reinforcing expectations that borrowing costs will continue to decline as macroeconomic conditions stabilise and liquidity improves across the financial system. The latest adjustment represents a sharp fall from 11.71% in March, extending a rapid downward trend driven by declining Treasury bill yields and easing interbank rates.
The Ghana Reference Rate (GRR), which serves as the base pricing benchmark for commercial loans, is a key transmission channel for monetary policy. Its continued decline signals that the effects of disinflation and improved macro stability are now feeding into the credit market.
The GRR has fallen from double-digit highs above 14% earlier in 2026 to near single-digit territory within a matter of months, reflecting a broader repricing of risk across Ghana’s money markets.
Falling inflation, improved cedi stability, and increased confidence in Ghana’s post-IMF recovery trajectory closely tie this shift.
In theory, the drop in the reference rate should translate into lower lending rates for businesses and households. Some banks have already begun adjusting pricing, with lending rates easing from around 22% toward the highteens in recent weeks, although the pass-through remains partial.
However, the key question is transmission. Unless commercial banks accelerate lending rate reductions, the benefits of lower benchmark rates may take longer to filter through to SMEs and industrial activity.
The trajectory of the reference rate suggests further easing is likely, particularly if inflation continues to trend downward and fiscal conditions remain stable. Ghana’s interest rate environment is shifting decisively downward, but whether that translates into meaningfully cheaper credit for businesses remains the critical test for the recovery story.
