The Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) has announced that the country’s inflation rate fell to 6.3 per cent in November 2025, down from 9.5 per cent in October this year.
The Government Statistician, Dr Alhassan Iddrisu, told journalists on Wednesday in Accra that the November figure was the lowest recorded since the 2021 rebasing of the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
He described the continued slowdown as evidence of broad-based stabilisation across the Ghanaian economy and that the figure marked 11 consecutive months of sustained decline.
According to him, food inflation posted one of the steepest declines, easing sharply from 9.5 per cent in October to 6.6 per cent in November.
He attributed the fall to significant declines in inflation for vegetables, tubers, fish and fruits, categories that had previously exerted upward pressure on household budgets.
The month-on-month food inflation rate rose marginally to 1.1 per cent following a dip in October, indicating a return to typical seasonal patterns, while Non-food inflation also softened, dropping from 6.9 per cent to 6.1 per cent.
The disinflation was also noticeable in both local and imported components as inflation for locally produced items fell to 6.8 per cent from 8.0 per cent, while imported inflation dropped significantly to 5.0 per cent from 7.8 per cent, due mainly to the relatively stable cedi.
GIK/APA


