ACCRA, June 12 – Ghana’s economy expanded 6.4% in the first quarter of 2026 according to the Ghana Statistical Service press briefing in Accra on Wednesday. The figure marks a modest acceleration from the 6.2% recorded in the same quarter of 2025, and it carries a detail that matters more than the headline number itself: for the first time in years, the growth is predominantly real.
The GDP deflator, the broadest measure of economy-wide price changes fell from 23.9% in Q1 2025 to 4.1% in Q1 2026. That collapse in price pressure means the economy is producing more, not just charging more. It is a distinction that separates genuine recovery from inflation-inflated optics, and Ghana’s Q1 figures fall firmly on the right side of that line.
In value terms, nominal GDP reached GH¢420.4 billion in the first quarter of 2026, up from GH¢378.0 billion a year earlier. Real GDP stripped of price effects stood at GH¢57.4 billion compared with GH¢53.9 billion in Q1 2025. The non-oil economy, which strips out petroleum sector volatility, grew 6.3%, confirming that the expansion is broad-based rather than commodity-dependent.
“The data showed that growth was increasingly being supported by services-related activities, particularly information and communications technology, trade, and transport.”, Dr. Alhassan Iddrisu, Government Statistician, Ghana Statistical Service said.
Services: The Engine Room
Services remained the dominant force in Ghana’s economy, expanding 7.1% year-on-year and contributing 48.3 percent of total GDP growth. That contribution nearly half of all economic expansion from a single broad sector confirms the structural shift underway in Ghana’s growth model away from commodity dependence and toward domestic services activity.
The standout performance within services was Information and Communication Technology, which surged 25.2% year-on-year. That number demands context: a 25% expansion in a single quarter is not incremental growth, it is a sector in acceleration. The GSS attributed the ICT surge to increased mobile money adoption, fintech activity, and data services consumption. Ghana’s mobile money ecosystem, anchored by MTN Mobile Money and Telecel Cash, continues to deepen financial inclusion while simultaneously generating measurable GDP activity that was invisible in the formal economy a decade ago.
Transport and Storage grew 13.0%, reflecting the broader revival of commercial activity as inflation-weary consumers and businesses regained purchasing confidence. Trade expanded 9.0%. Together with ICT, these three sub-sectors as Government Statistician Dr. Alhassan Iddrisu noted at the briefing demonstrated that Ghana’s services economy is growing broadly across multiple fronts simultaneously, not just in one high-performing pocket.
The drag within services came from Accommodation and Food Service Activities, which contracted 13.6% year-on-year. The hospitality sector’s continued weakness likely reflects lingering consumer caution around discretionary spending, even as the broader economy recovers. It is a sub-sector to watch in the coming quarters as real incomes stabilise.
Industry: Mining Leads a Broad Recovery
The industry sector posted its strongest quarter in recent memory, growing 6.9% in Q1 2026 against just 4.1% in the same period of 2025. The turnaround is significant and Mining and Quarrying deserves most of the credit.
Mining and Quarrying expanded 10.7%, a sharp reversal from the 1.5% contraction recorded in Q1 2025 and a marked improvement from just 2.7% growth a year earlier. The rebound reflects two converging forces: higher global commodity prices and improved operational efficiencies at Ghana’s gold mining operations.
Gold was the backbone. Output grew 15.7% year-on-year, continuing the double-digit trajectory that has made Ghana one of Africa’s most significant gold producers. At a time when global gold prices have remained elevated driven by central bank buying and safe-haven demand. Ghana’s production recovery has translated directly into export revenue and fiscal receipts.
Oil and Gas also returned to positive territory, recording 7.0% growth after a significant contraction of 25.8% in Q1 2025. The recovery points to improved production from Ghana’s offshore fields following operational disruptions that weighed on output through much of last year. While oil contributes a declining share of Ghana’s GDP relative to its peak, a 7% recovery in a sector that had contracted by more than a quarter is a meaningful swing in the industrial numbers.
Manufacturing and Electricity both grew 6.2%, while Construction expanded a more modest 1.3% suggesting that the industrial recovery, while broad, is still finding its feet in the built environment segment.
Gold output grew 15.7 % year-on-year. Mining and Quarrying expanded 10.7%. Together, they powered a sector that had barely grown twelve months earlier to post its best quarter since Ghana’s economic crisis peaked.
Agriculture: Solid Gains, One Sharp Drag
The Agriculture sector grew 4.0% in Q1 2026, a respectable performance that reflects improvement across most of the sector’s sub-components. Forestry and Logging posted strong growth of 9.0%. Crop Production, the largest agricultural sub-sector increased 4.7%, supported by improved planting seasons and input availability following the easing of the import cost pressures that squeezed farmers through 2023 and 2024.
The significant drag was Fishing, which contracted 18.5% year-on-year. The sharp decline reflects a combination of seasonal factors and structural challenges in Ghana’s artisanal and semi-industrial fishing sector including illegal fishing activity, fuel cost pressures on fishing boats, and coastal sea surface temperature changes affecting fish stock distribution. The contraction is sharp enough to warrant policy attention if it persists into Q2.
The Inflation Dimension: Growth That Means Something
Perhaps the most consequential number in the entire GSS release is not the 6.4% GDP growth figure, it is the GDP deflator reading of 4.1%. For much of 2023 and early 2024, Ghana’s nominal GDP growth was being substantially inflated by the price surge that drove headline inflation to a peak of 53.6% in January 2023. A large part of what looked like economic expansion was simply prices rising faster than output.
The collapse in the deflator to 4.1% in Q1 2026 means the growth number is now overwhelmingly capturing real increases in productive output. That is the difference between a recovery story and a recovery reality. Ghana appears to have moved from the former to the latter.
The Monthly Indicator of Economic Growth reinforces this reading. The MIEG recorded year-on-year expansion of 6.1% in January, 7.7% in February, and 5.4% in March with the index standing at 121.6 in March 2026 against 115.4 a year earlier. The monthly pattern shows consistent momentum rather than a single-month statistical spike.
What to Watch in the Near Term
Four dynamics will determine whether Ghana’s Q1 momentum carries through the rest of 2026.
First, the gold price trajectory. Ghana’s mining rebound is partly a production story and partly a price story. Global gold prices have supported export revenues through the first quarter, but any sustained correction in commodity markets would put pressure on both mining sector output value and fiscal receipts at a moment when the government is under IMF-monitored fiscal consolidation obligations.
Second, the IMF Policy Coordination Instrument. Ghana transitioned from its three-year Extended Credit Facility to a 36-month PCI in May 2026. The PCI maintains IMF oversight without automatic balance-of-payments support. The discipline it imposes — including a 4.5 percent deficit ceiling will constrain the government’s ability to use fiscal stimulus to sustain growth momentum if private sector demand softens in the second half of the year.
Third, the ICT sector’s durability. A 25.2% growth rate in ICT is remarkable, but sustaining it requires continued private investment in digital infrastructure, regulatory conditions that encourage fintech expansion, and household income levels high enough to support data consumption. As real incomes stabilize post-disinflation, the consumer base for digital services should continue to expand but the pace of ICT growth will almost certainly moderate from its current elevated rate.
Fourth, the fishing sector. An 18.5% contraction in a sub-sector that supports a significant share of coastal livelihoods is not just an agricultural statistic, it is a social and economic pressure point. If the contraction persists into Q2 and Q3, it will weigh on agricultural sector performance and may require targeted policy response.
The GSS itself noted that the Q1 results have important implications for business and policy: firms were encouraged to expand investment in high-growth areas including ICT, manufacturing, mining, trade, and transport precisely the sectors that led the quarter’s performance.
The Bigger Picture
Ghana’s 6.4% Q1 growth sits within a continental context of generally resilient African economic performance. The AfDB’s 2026 African Economic Outlook projects continent-wide growth of 4.2% for the year, with Ghana’s performance well above that average. After enduring one of sub-Saharan Africa’s most severe recent economic crises, a domestic debt exchange, IMF programme entry, currency collapse, and multi-decade inflation peak, the Q1 2026 data represents a meaningful marker in Ghana’s recovery arc.
The combination of resource strength in mining, rapidly expanding digital services, easing inflation, and IMF programme anchoring positions Ghana as one of the more constructive near-term stories in West African economic development. The risks are real commodity price volatility, fiscal consolidation pressure, and sectoral drags from fishing and hospitality. But the foundation that Q1 2026 has laid is, by the standards of the past three years, genuinely solid.