Producer Price Inflation (PPI) for June 2025 dropped sharply to 5.9%, marking the lowest level recorded since November 2023, according to the latest data released by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS).
This represents a 4.2 percentage point drop from the 10.2% rate recorded in May 2025 and a significant 19.7 percentage point decline compared to the rate posted in June 2024.
It also marks the fifth consecutive month of disinflation.
On a month-on-month basis, the data revealed producer price deflation of 1.4%, indicating that average prices received by producers in June were lower than those in May 2025.
The decline was largely driven by steep falls in the country’s two dominant sectors.
Inflation in the Mining and Quarrying sector, which holds the largest PPI weight of 43.7%, dropped from 13.7% in May to 6.5% in June, while inflation in the Manufacturing sector, accounting for 35% of the PPI basket, fell from 9.8% to 7.6%.
Meanwhile, the Transport sector recorded deeper deflation at -7.0%, from -4.8% the previous month.
The Hotels and Restaurants sub-sector also saw a significant swing from +6.5% in May to -2.7% in June, a sharp 9.2 percentage point reversal.
The GSS noted that if the declining input costs are passed on, consumers could begin to experience meaningful price relief across transport, food services, and travel.
SP/VPO
How Virtual Reality is enhancing business and customer experience









