The World Bank has cautioned Ghana against a premature return to the Eurobond market, warning that such a move would be seen by investors as a shortcut rather than a sign of real recovery.
In its latest policy notes, the Bank stressed that Ghana’s path to stability lies not in fresh borrowing but in discipline, transparency, and politically tough reforms that demonstrate credibility to both citizens and global markets.
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“Credibility cannot be rebuilt through fresh borrowing. Importantly, the new administration should refrain from a hasty return to the Eurobond market, which investors would interpret as the easy way out,” the Bank said.
Instead, the Bretton Woods institution advised the government to strengthen fiscal and growth fundamentals, stick to the Medium-Term Debt Management Strategy, and publish transparent annual borrowing plans to reassure investors of Ghana’s debt sustainability.
Lessons from a History of Bailouts
The warning comes as Ghana grapples with the legacy of 17 IMF programmes in 68 years, spending nearly 40 years under active Fund supervision. The Bank noted that crises have often stemmed from fiscal indiscipline, political overspending, and heavy reliance on Eurobond borrowing.
It pointed out that the 2022 economic collapse was not triggered by COVID-19 or the Russia-Ukraine war alone, but by years of weak financial management and “political shortsightedness” encouraged by easy access to international capital markets.
Government Echoes the Call for Restraint
President John Dramani Mahama has also signaled caution, stating during a media encounter that his administration is not in favour of an early market return.
“We have survived without going to the capital markets. We’ve survived without borrowing. As President, I would not favor a quick return. I think we should consolidate first before looking at external financing,” Mahama said.
Path Forward: Reform or Repeat
The World Bank outlined a clear reform agenda for Ghana:
- Enforce fiscal rules and resist election-year overspending.
- Broaden the tax base to reduce dependence on borrowing.
- Reform state-owned enterprises, particularly in the energy and cocoa sectors.
- Strengthen transparency in debt management and public spending.
Failure to follow through, the Bank warned, risks shutting Ghana out of international markets once again and locking the economy into the familiar cycle of crisis and bailout that has undermined growth since independence.
“Reestablishing credibility will take time, but the process can start immediately,” the report concluded.

























