The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is likely to grant board approval for the fifth review of Ghana’s bailout programme in December 2025, IC Research has projected.
This development follows a staff-level agreement reached between the Government of Ghana and the IMF mission in October 2023, with the authorities meeting all six quantitative performance criteria and four indicative targets for the period ending June 2025.
Board approval would trigger a disbursement of US$385 million from the Fund, bolstering Ghana’s forex reserves ahead of the January 2026 Eurobond debt service, estimated at US$689 million.
IC Research noted that the IMF adopted a notably more optimistic tone in the fifth review compared to the gradually softer language used during the first four reviews.
“We took a closer view of the language adopted by the Fund at the end of the fifth review and inferred a more positive and tangibly confident assessment of the latest performance and near-term economic prospects. The Fund described the authorities’ actions to support financial sector stability as ‘strong,’ while indicating that the authorities made ‘notable strides’ in addressing longstanding challenges in the energy sector,” the research firm stated.
The IMF also concluded that macroeconomic stabilization is taking root, with inflation expected to remain within the Bank of Ghana’s medium-term target range of 8.0% ±2.0%, allowing for gradual monetary policy normalization.
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