By Elsie Appiah-Osei
Accra, May 28, GNA – Ghana’s economy has moved “from the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) to the Wellness Centre,” shifting to reform partnership, Finance Minister Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Baah Forson has declared.
That he described as a decisive shift from crisis management to sustained macroeconomic recovery.
Presenting an update to Parliament on Thursday on the progress in restoring macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability ahead of schedule, the Minister said the country was now transitioning itself from reliance on external financial bailouts to a more credible reform partnership anchored in discipline and investor confidence.
He said, “Mr. Speaker, for Ghana, this marks an important shift from seeking a financial bailout to engaging as a credible reform partner while continuing to benefit from policy discipline, external validation, and strengthened investor confidence.”
Dr. Forson noted that the Policy Coordination Instrument (PCI) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) would be central to sustaining reforms, providing regular policy assessments and technical support that reinforced investor confidence.
“The PCI will enable us to continue leveraging the IMF’s regular policy assessment and expertise as a signal to investors, thereby certifying the credibility of our stewardship and further strengthening our credit rating,” he said on the Floor of Parliament.
He added that Ghana’s improved position reflected stronger fiscal discipline and coordinated policy action, which had helped stabilise key macroeconomic indicators.
The remarks come as government continues efforts to consolidate gains inflation management, currency stability, debt restructuring and revenue mobilisation, amid attempts to rebuild long-term investor trust and economic resilience.
According to the IMF, its engagement with Ghana was now shifting beyond the Extended Credit Facility programme towards a reform-focused Policy Coordination Instrument.
The Fund said ongoing discussions have combined the 2026 Article IV consultation, the final ECF review, and negotiations on a 36-month non-financing PCI, with emphasis on maintaining a credible fiscal path, strengthening economic resilience, and advancing structural reforms.
The Fund noted that improvements in Ghana’s debt trajectory had created some fiscal space to support development priorities while safeguarding recent macroeconomic stabilisation gains. However, it stressed that this space depended on the effective implementation of ambitious public financial management and structural reforms aimed at reducing risks linked to contingent liabilities.
Amid external uncertainties and elevated fiscal risks, particularly from state-owned enterprises and quasi-fiscal operations, the IMF said the PCI reform agenda would focus on stronger safeguards, transparency, and accountability.
It added that these measures were intended to reinforce policy credibility, rebuild fiscal buffers, and create room for priority investment and development spending.
GNA
Edited by Linda Asante Agyei
May 28 2026
Reporter: Elsie Appiah-Osei