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Fuel prices, rent and utility costs push Ghana’s inflation up for first time since December 2024

After 15 consecutive months of disinflation, Ghana’s inflation trajectory has recorded its first reversal, with new price pressures are beginning to emerge beyond the food sector.Advertise local businesses

Data for April 2026 showed headline inflation edging up to 3.4%, from 3.2% in March, marking the first uptick since December 2024.

On a month-on-month basis, consumer prices rose by 1.0%, suggesting that the country’s rapid disinflation cycle may be entering a more complex phase.

The latest inflation dynamics are particularly significant because the increase was not driven by food prices which are historically the biggest source of inflationary pressure in Ghana but rather by rising fuel costs, housing expenses, utilities, and services.

Food inflation actually slowed marginally from 2.3% in March to 2.2% in April, indicating that broader inflationary pressures are increasingly shifting toward non-food components of the economy.
Middle East fuel shock

One of the reasons for April’s inflation rebound was a sharp increase in fuel prices, largely linked to escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

The conflict disrupted global energy markets and pushed international crude oil prices above $100 per barrel, transmitting imported inflationary pressures into Ghana’s domestic economy.

For Ghana, a net importer of refined petroleum products, the impact was immediate. Petrol prices surged by 17.2% between March and April 2026, sharply increasing transportation and logistics costs across the economy.

The development threatens to erode some of the gains made earlier in the year when lower transport costs contributed significantly to easing inflation.

The latest fuel shock highlights Ghana’s continued vulnerability to external commodity price swings despite improving macroeconomic stability.
Services inflation as major point

While inflation for goods moderated to 1.1% in April, services inflation accelerated sharply from 7.2% to 9.6%, making it the fastest-rising component within the consumer basket.

The strongest pressure came from housing and utility-related costs.

The “Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas and Other Fuels” category accounted for approximately 37% of total inflation during the month, underscoring the growing burden of living costs on households.

Charcoal prices recorded a steep year-on-year increase of 52.4%, while rent costs climbed by 17.1%. Rising secondary school fees also added to household financial pressures.

The trend suggests that inflationary pressures are becoming increasingly structural and service-driven, rather than solely commodity-based.
Imported inflation returns

Another notable trend in April’s inflation data was the return of imported inflation.

In the first quarter of 2026, Ghana benefited from relative exchange rate stability, which helped suppress the cost of imported goods. Imported inflation had fallen into negative territory at -0.6% in March.Advertise local businesses

However, the trend reversed in April, with imported inflation rising to 0.5%, reflecting renewed external cost pressures linked to higher global energy prices and supply chain disruptions.

The turnaround signals that the disinflationary benefits from currency stability may be weakening as external risks intensify.
Supply chain vulnerabilities

Even within the relatively stable food sector, isolated supply disruptions continued to expose weaknesses in Ghana’s domestic distribution networks.

Fresh tomato prices surged by 34.3% month-on-month in April, driven largely by cross-border trade disruptions and transportation bottlenecks.

The spike illustrates how fragile supply chains and the perishability of agricultural products continue to leave food prices vulnerable to sudden shocks despite broader moderation in overall food inflation.

The April inflation data increasingly points to what analysts describe as an inflationary pivot for Ghana’s economy.

The sharp decline in inflation witnessed over the past year was largely supported by easing food prices, improved agricultural supply conditions, and relative currency stability. However, those gains now appear to be moderating.

Going forward, inflation management may depend less on food supply improvements and more on Ghana’s ability to navigate volatile global energy markets, stabilise utility costs, and contain rising service-sector inflation.

While Ghana’s inflation rate remains historically low compared to the peaks recorded in 2022, the latest rebound highlights the fragility of the recovery and the growing influence of imported and structural cost pressures on household budgets.

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