This study investigates how rising government debt has weakened the effectiveness of monetary policy in Ghana between January 2014 and April 2023. Using a Vector Error Correction Model, impulse response functions and threshold regression analysis, the results show that domestic debt reduces credit availability to the private sector by absorbing financial resources, while external debt undermines transmission through exchange-rate and external-sector pressures. Threshold estimates identify debt-to-GDP levels beyond which the monetary policy rate loses statistical significance, confirming regime-dependent liquidity-trap dynamics even at positive interest rates. The findings extend the liquidity-trap concept to an African emerging-market context, demonstrating that debt accumulation and banking-sector fragility can replicate trap-like conditions outside advanced economies. Policy implications are clear: the Bank of Ghana must strengthen macroprudential regulation to safeguard resilience, adopt enhanced communication and forward guidance to anchor expectations and deepen fiscal-monetary coordination to ease pressure on private-sector credit. By identifying critical debt thresholds, this study provides a framework for preserving monetary traction in debt-laden economies and offers a foundation for future research on informal financial dynamics and cross-country comparisons in Africa.
Baafi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.