Economy News

Sub-Saharan Africa benchmark rates on hold in Nov

 Major sub-Saharan African central banks will keep rates on hold this month as most developing markets proceed to delay the global recovery after the epidemic shock that upset economies over the continent, a Reuters survey discovered on Friday.

Benchmark interest rates for Ghana, Nigeria, and Kenya will presumably remain on hold at 13.50%, 11.50%, and 7.00%, individually, in the following days. All three central banks have been on an easing cycle for about five years.

According to Razia Khan, research head for Africa and Middle East economies at Standard Chartered (OTC: SCBFF), with an altogether separate growth trajectory in much of frontier SSA, there will be less stress on central banks to tighten, just yet.

A recent survey implied growth in sub-Saharan Africa’s large economies would be combined into 2022, following a year of recovery from coronavirus lockdowns, as life gradually returns to normal amid low vaccination rates.

Virág Fórizs, the emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, stated policymakers would keep their focus on helping recoveries by maintaining stable rates this month and beyond.

 

Tightening the monetary policy

In Ghana, the central bank lowered rates earlier this year to boost the economy, and policymakers are unpromising to modify the course at this point. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s tightened monetary policy has failed, with inflation plummeting in recent months, particularly as the rebound in economic activity appears to be fading.

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Last month, the International Monetary Fund approved its sub-Saharan Africa increase forecast of 3.7% for this year and 3.8% for 2022.

Last month the World Health Organization said vaccination rates had not significantly changed on the continent. Only five African countries are supposed to meet a target of fully vaccinating 40% of their population versus coronavirus by the end of the year.

Nigeria is beginning a mass vaccination campaign, striving to inoculate half its targeted population by the close of January. Africa’s most populous country has an intention to vaccinate 111 million people to attain herd immunity.

South Africa’s central bank increased its primary lending rate by 25 basis points to 3.75% in a close call on Thursday, the first-rate hike in three years in answer to growing inflation risks.

The Central Bank of Kenya is supposed to hold rates as inflation will probably fall towards the target midpoint in the coming months without policy interference. Its meeting is registered for the end of November.

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