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Ghana urgently needs a Pricing Regulatory Authority to stabilise economy

Ghana finds itself in a trou­bling economic cycle—where prices of goods and services continue to rise, often without justification or regulatory over­sight. While global and local economic dynamics do play a role, the absence of a strong, special­ised national pricing regulatory mechanism allows unchecked price escalation that hurts the consumer, especially the vulnerable.

The time has come for Ghana to establish a Pricing Regulatory Commission or Authority, a body dedicated solely to monitoring, evaluating, and setting fair price thresholds for essential goods and services. This institution will be different from, and operate inde­pendently of, existing consumer protection structures. It will serve as a stabilising force in the econo­my and help restore confidence in market fairness.

Why the Pricing

Regulatory Authority must be separate from Consumer Protection

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Ghana currently has a Consumer Protection framework, backed by the Consumer Protection Act and implemented through institutions like the Consumer Protection Agency and Ghana Standards Authority. While these institutions have been useful in safeguard­ing consumer rights against fake products, deceptive packaging, or harmful goods, their mandate is limited in scope when it comes to price regulation.

Consumer protection bodies cannot impose price ceilings or floors, nor can they regulate price fluctuations tied to the dollar or inflation unless it involves clear exploitation or deception. In con­trast, a dedicated Pricing Regulato­ry Commission will have the legal authority and technical expertise to:

• Monitor price trends across markets and sectors,

• Set minimum and maxi­mum prices for essential goods,

• Ensure that prices fall when input costs decrease or when the cedi strengthens,

• Stop opportunistic pricing by retailers and service providers.

Separating these two institu­tions—Consumer Protection and Price Regulation—will not only reduce bureaucratic conflict but will also promote specialisation and effectiveness. Consumer protection ensures product quality; price regu­lation ensures product affordability. Both are essential, but they must function independently with clear mandates.

What a Pricing

Regulatory Authority

will do

A Ghana Pricing Regulatory Authority (GPRA) would:

• Monitor and control the prices of essential commodities and services.

• Set price ceilings and price floors to protect consumers and ensure fair trade.

• Investigate price hikes and demand economic justification before approval.

• Require periodic reviews of pricing by sectors—especially in food, transport, construction, health, utilities, and rent.

• Enforce penalties on businesses or individuals engaging in exploitative pricing.

• Issue regular public bul­letins on benchmark prices for key goods and services.

This Authority will not distort the free market but rather regulate price abuse and unfair manipula­tion, which continue to threaten economic stability and widen inequality in Ghana.

The dollar excuse

must end

Today, nearly every product— from food to cement, rent to medical supplies—is linked to the U.S. dollar. Yet, when the dollar rate drops, prices remain high. There’s no enforceable mechanism to track and correct this disparity. The GPRA will fix this by mandat­ing automatic price reviews and re­ductions tied to real-time exchange rate and production costs.

No economy thrives when only price increments are allowed and reductions are optional or non-ex­istent.

Lessons from other countries

Several countries have imple­mented similar systems with mea­surable success:

1. South Africa – National Consumer Commission (NCC)

Works in collaboration with pric­ing monitors to check unfair price hikes, especially during crises.

2. India – National Pharma­ceutical Pricing Authority (NPPA)

Sets maximum retail prices (MRPs) for medicines and health services, ensuring healthcare re­mains affordable.

3. Malaysia – Price Control and Anti-Profiteering Act

Gives legal backing to regulate prices of over 20 essential items like fuel, rice, sugar, and flour. Businesses must justify price changes with documentation.

4. Philippines – Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)

Issues Suggested Retail Prices (SRP) for essential goods. Violators of the SRP are sanctioned.

These countries understand that unchecked price movements can collapse household incomes and damage long-term economic growth.

Legal empowerment is key

To be effective, Parliament must pass a new law establishing the GPRA with the authority to:

• Audit companies and supply chains,

• Define what qualifies as an “essential good or service,”

• Issue guidelines on price margins,

• Enforce penalties and corrective pricing,

• Collaborate with industry bodies, banks, and trade unions.

The Commission should operate like the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) or the Bank of Ghana, with transparency, accountability, and independence from political influence.

Ghana cannot continue to oper­ate in an environment where prices go up but rarely come down. A Pricing Regulatory Authority is not a luxury—it is a national economic necessity. The current Consumer Protection structure is useful, but it is not enough. A dedicated, em­powered commission that oversees and enforces pricing sanity across sectors is long overdue.

Let us act now to safeguard the ordinary Ghanaian, protect local businesses from exploitative com­petition, and restore confidence in the market system.

A country that controls how prices are determined controls its future.

 BY PETER DEBRAH. PHD

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