Inflation is usually discussed as something that happens to businesses. But SMEs are also part of the inflation chain. They are affected by rising costs, but their pricing decisions also influence what customers finally pay.
It is important to be fair: SMEs do not single-handedly cause inflation. Inflation is driven by many factors, including fuel prices, exchange rates, food supply, taxes, interest rates, imported goods, global conflict and government policy. However, because SMEs make up a large share of businesses in Ghana, their combined pricing behaviour can contribute to how inflation is felt in the market.
When suppliers increase prices, SMEs often face a difficult choice:
- keep prices the same and lose profit
- increase prices and risk losing customers
- reduce product size or quality
- delay restocking
- cut staff or operating costs
This is why inflation planning matters.
Ghana’s inflation has improved greatly from the high levels seen during the economic crisis, but price risks remain. Reuters reported that inflation rose slightly to 3.4% year-on-year in April 2026, from 3.2% in March, while Ghana Statistical Service also reported April 2026 national inflation at 3.4%.
For SMEs, low inflation does not always mean low business pressure. Rent, transport, wages, electricity, raw materials and packaging may still increase depending on the sector. A business may experience higher costs even when national inflation looks stable.
This is why SMEs need proper financial forecasting. A forecast helps business owners understand how changes in cost affect profit. It also helps them decide when to increase prices, how much stock to buy, which products are profitable and how much cash they need to survive difficult months.
Good pricing strategy is also important. SMEs should avoid random price increases. Instead, they should calculate costs carefully, understand customer sensitivity and communicate value clearly. If prices must rise, customers are more likely to accept it when the business maintains quality, service and transparency.
At NexBiz, we help SMEs prepare financial forecasts, cash flow projections and pricing strategies that support better decision-making.
Key takeaway:
SMEs are affected by inflation, but their pricing choices also shape market prices. Better forecasting helps businesses protect profit without losing customer trust.
