dc.description.abstract |
The study examines the antecedence of inflation, most especially the effect of
money supply growth, interest rate and real depreciation of the cedi on inflation in
Ghana using annual time series data from 1990 to 2016. An Autoregressive
Distributed Lag model was adopted as the estimation technique to examine the
long-run and short-run dynamics among the variables used. In the long run, the
regression estimates indicated that there is an insignificant positive effect between
money supply growth and inflation. However, interest rate in the long run was
observed to have a positive significant effect on inflation in Ghana. Real
depreciation of the cedi was also seen to have a negative insignificant effect on
inflation. The short run results indicated that money supply growth had a positive
insignificant effect on inflation; interest rate and real depreciation of the cedi were
equally observed to have a positive significant effect on inflation in Ghana. From
the results obtained money supply is not an integral part in the fight against
inflation in Ghana. This confirms why the Bank of Ghana has shifted for
monetary targeting to inflation targeting monetary policy. Therefore, to reduce
inflation in the economy, immediate measures need to be adopted by the Central
Bank to strengthen the effectiveness of inflation targeting as a monetary policy. A
recommendation is made that the Bank of Ghana should continue to use interest
rate as the major instrument in the conduct of monetary policy in Ghana. It is also
recommended that measures should be implemented to reduce the depreciation of
the cedi, through the reduction of budget deficit financing and reduction in
external borrowing. |
en_US |