Ghana Reference Rate for January drops to 15.68%; interest rates set to decline

Story By: myjoyonline.com

The Ghana Reference Rate (GRR), a key benchmark used by commercial banks to price loans, has fallen marginally for January 2026.

Data from the Ghana Association of Banks shows the rate dropped from 15.9% in December 2025 to 15.68%, effective January 7, 2026.

The decline was driven by improvements in key indicators used to calculate the GRR, including the Monetary Policy Rate, Treasury bill rates, and interbank market rates.

- Advertisement -

Some commercial banks told JoyBusiness that marginal improvements in inflation and Treasury bill yields also contributed to the rate review.

Background

In December 2025, the GRR fell to 15.9% following a 350-basis-point reduction in the Monetary Policy Rate to 18% and a slight decline in Treasury bill rates.

- Advertisement -

In November 2025, the GRR had increased slightly to 17.96% from 17.86%, influenced by small rises in Treasury bill rates—from 10.50% to 10.67%—and interbank rates, which edged up from 20.93% to 21%.

October 2025 saw the GRR drop by 2 percentage points, from 19.86% in September, continuing a steady downward trend throughout the year. The rate, which stood at 29.72% in January 2025, rose marginally to 29.96% in February, then steadily declined to 19.67% in August.

Impact

The latest reduction could lead to slightly lower borrowing costs and interest rates for commercial bank loans.

- Advertisement -

Loans contracted in December 2025 are likely to be benchmarked on the new GRR, meaning interest payments on new loans should be lower than those in November. Borrowers with fixed-rate loans are unaffected, while those on variable-rate agreements may see small adjustments depending on their bank’s pricing model.

The decline comes as many businesses continue to face tight credit conditions due to a liquidity squeeze driven by measures to curb inflation and stabilise the economy.

The latest Monetary Policy Report shows average lending rates have dropped from 26.6% to 24.2%, reflecting an easing credit environment.

The Bank of Ghana also notes declining money market yields, with the 91-day Treasury bill rate falling from 13.4% in July to 10.3% in August 2025.

Ghana Reference Rate

Introduced in 2017 by the Bank of Ghana and the Ghana Association of Banks, the GRR provides a transparent benchmark for determining lending rates.

The first GRR, set in April 2017, was 16.82%.

Developed after extensive consultation, the GRR replaced the old base rate model to provide a consistent and open framework for loan pricing and remains a central guide for interest rate decisions across Ghana’s financial sector.

Share This Article
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *