
The First Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG), Dr. Mumuni Zakaria, says the recent rally of the cedi is not due to artificial support by the central bank, but rather a result of strong, non-debt-creating reserves.
He said the central bank has found a strategic way of meeting market demand without drawing down its foreign exchange buffers.
“If we were that heavy in terms of support to the market, we would not be doing well with reserves,” Dr. Zakaria told host George Wiafe.
“But if there is one thing we’ve done well under the IMF programme, it is reserve accumulation.”
He described Ghana’s reserve performance as “very, very impressive.”
“Look at the IMF target—we have already achieved it. The target was three months of import cover. We’re now at 3.7 months using the IMF’s own metric,” he said.
“If you include petroleum funds, we’re even at 4.7 months.”
Dr. Zakaria dismissed claims that the central bank is depleting reserves to hold the cedi.
“Unfortunately, if this were the case, the market would have seen through it. Market players are very smart,” he said.
“They wouldn’t trust us, and the rally would be short-lived.”
He stressed that the current reserves are not based on debt or short-term inflows.
“These are organically accumulated reserves. At the end of April, we were above $10 billion. And we expect to hit $11 billion by the end of June,” he revealed. “This is way above what’s expected under the IMF programme. That’s what’s giving the market confidence.”
He noted that this level of reserve accumulation is not just a show of strength but a fundamental shift.
“This time is different,” he said.