Producer price inflation edged up slightly to 1.5% in March 2026, reflecting a marginal rise in the cost of goods and services at the factory gate.
According to latest data from the Ghana Statistical Service, this represents a 0.1 percentage point increase from the 1.4% recorded in February, indicating a modest uptick in producer-level price pressures.
On a month-on-month basis, producer prices rose by 0.7% in March, a slowdown from the 1.3% recorded in February.
Mixed sector performance
The mining and quarrying sector, the largest component of the index, recorded a marginal decline in inflation to 3.9%, from 4.1% in February.
Manufacturing, which accounts for about 35% of the index, remained in negative territory but showed improvement, with inflation rising from -2.9% to -2.2%.
Utilities continued to record elevated price levels, with electricity and gas inflation at 13.6%, while water supply and waste management stood at 9.9%, reflecting persistent cost pressures.
In contrast, transport and storage saw deeper price declines, with inflation falling to -9.8%, while accommodation and food services remained negative at -9.4%.
Price pressures remain subdued
Despite the marginal increase, producer inflation remains significantly lower than a year earlier, when it was more than 20 percentage points higher—pointing to easing cost pressures along the production chain.
The Producer Price Index (PPI) rose to 280.3 in March, up from 278.4 in February.
Implications for businesses and policy
The relatively low inflation environment offers some relief for businesses, particularly those dependent on industrial inputs, as it supports more stable input costs and planning.
However, the slight monthly increase suggests emerging short-term pressures, calling for cautious pricing strategies to avoid dampening demand.
For policymakers, the continued decline in transport-related prices provides some relief for competitiveness, with emphasis likely to remain on fuel stability and logistics efficiency.
Overall, the data points to a broadly stable producer price environment, with isolated cost pressures in utilities and a gradual recovery in manufacturing activity.






















































