Ghana’s government says it is “cautiously optimistic” about securing the next tranche of funding from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), as the global lender prepares to assess the country’s economic programme in early July.
If approved, the fourth review under the IMF’s Extended Credit Facility (ECF) will unlock around $370 million in fresh funding, a vital injection that could help stabilize the economy and reinforce Ghana’s path to recovery. The disbursement would bring total support under the programme to roughly $2.4 billion since May 2023.
Speaking on Channel One TV’s ‘The Point of View’, Presidential Advisor on the Economy, Seth Terkper, said recent engagements with IMF staff suggest Ghana is on track to meet the necessary conditions.
“All indications, including from the staff who came into the country, are saying that things have gone well,” Mr Terkper told host Bernard Avle. “We think the structural measures and benchmarks have been met, which means we can be cautiously optimistic that the IMF Board will pass the programme.”
The optimism follows the IMF’s April confirmation that a staff-level agreement had been reached with Ghanaian authorities. IMF Communications Director Julie Kozack said the final board approval would green-light the next disbursement, providing additional financial support to aid Ghana’s ongoing fiscal and structural reforms.
The expected review comes at a critical moment, as the country continues to battle economic headwinds, including currency pressures and a high public debt burden. Analysts say a positive outcome would not only bring financial relief but also boost investor confidence, help stabilize the Ghanaian cedi, and ease inflation.
The IMF programme has become a cornerstone of Ghana’s economic recovery strategy, centred on domestic revenue mobilisation, tighter spending controls, and debt restructuring reforms the Fund views as essential for long-term stability.