Finance Minister presents 2025 mid-year budget today


Finance Minister, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson will today 24 July, deliver the 2025 Mid-Year Budget Review in Parliament.

‎With attention focused on whether government will stick to its original spending plan or request additional funds to tackle emerging fiscal and political demands.

‎The presentation comes amid signs of a recovering economy. Inflation has dropped from 23.5% at the start of the year to 13.7% by end of June.

Raising hopes of a possible single-digit rate before the year ends, ahead of the initial target of 11.9%.

The Ghana cedi has also rebounded strongly, appreciating from GH¢15 to the US dollar in January to about GH¢10.45 in July.

‎This has brought some relief to retailers, while manufacturers remain cautious, observing cedi performance over the next two months as agreed with business associations.

‎Revenue measures have seen mixed reactions. The cancellation of the betting tax has been widely welcomed, while the recent GH¢1 fuel levy has faced pushback. Observers are keen to know whether the levy will be temporary.

‎Economic growth is also outpacing earlier projections. While the government targeted 4.4% GDP growth in 2025, first-quarter data shows a 5.3% growth rate, likely prompting a revision in today’s update.

‎Ghana’s foreign reserves now stand at US$11.1 billion  enough to cover 4.8 months of imports, a jump from US$8.98 billion at the end of 2024.

‎This, combined with rising gold and cocoa export earnings and remittances, has boosted investor confidence and strengthened the currency.

‎As Dr. Forson delivers the update, stakeholders from business, civil society, and international partners will be watching for signs of fiscal discipline, credible policy direction and a commitment to long-term stability.


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