The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has rolled out a new Foreign Exchange (FX) Operations Framework aimed at enhancing transparency, strengthening market confidence, and ensuring stability within the country’s foreign exchange market.
The new framework, approved by the BoG Board, marks a major policy shift designed to clarify the objectives, principles, and operational processes guiding the central bank’s FX interventions.
It will also adopt a rule-based “discretion-under-constraint” approach, ensuring interventions are guided by transparent, pre-announced criteria rather than ad-hoc actions.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, the BoG noted that the move reinforces it’s commitment to macroeconomic stability under its inflation-targeting mandate and maintains a flexible, market-determined exchange rate regime.
Under the framework, BoG’s FX operations will pursue three core objectives:
1. Reserve Accumulation — to build strong buffers against external vulnerabilities.
2. Volatility Management — to reduce excessive short-term fluctuations without fixing the exchange rate.
3. Market-Neutral Intermediation — to channel FX inflows, including from the Gold Purchase Programme and export surrender requirements, into the market transparently and without influencing the currency’s trend.
A major feature of the framework is its rule-based, transparent approach to market operations. The BoG will conduct competitive, variable-rate, fixed-amount auctions for FX transactions, ensuring efficiency and fairness. Auction amounts will be announced in advance, and results published the same day.
To further strengthen accountability, the central bank will publish aggregated monthly FX operations data within five business days after the end of each month, distinguishing between its operational objectives. This move is expected to give market participants and the public clearer insights into BoG’s decisions and foster confidence in the foreign exchange market.
“This new FX Operations Framework reflects our commitment to transparency, market confidence, and macroeconomic stability. By clarifying our objectives and processes, we aim to strengthen resilience while preserving the flexibility of Ghana’s exchange rate regime,” the Bank said in a statement.
The new framework comes at a time when the Ghana cedi has been one of the best-performing currencies in sub-Saharan Africa, bolstered by prudent policy management and consistent foreign exchange inflows.
Source:https://citinewsroom.com/


