Try our mobile app

South Africa`s central bank holds rates as economy improves

Published: 2023-07-20 tag: 0

JSE:MPT JSE:ARH

South Africa`s central bank on Thursday kept its main lending rate unchanged for the first time since late 2021, following 10 consecutive rate hikes.

PRETORIA, July 20 (Reuters) - South Africa's central bank on Thursday kept its main lending rate unchanged for the first time since late 2021, following 10 consecutive rate hikes.

The decision by the South African Reserve Bank's (SARB) monetary policy committee (MPC) to keep rates at 8.25% is the first signal that its tightening cycle is nearing an end.

Inflation slowed to 5.4% year-on-year in June from 6.3% in May, data showed on Wednesday, falling within the central bank's target range of 3%-6% for the first time since April 2022.

At the last meeting in May, the bank had projected growth of 0.3% in 2023. That forecast has been revised up slightly to 0.4%.

"South Africa's economic conditions appear to have improved," the bank said in its MPC statement, while cautioning that the longer-term outlook remained uncertain.

Monetary policy is still in restrictive territory as the SARB only expects inflation to come within target sustainably in 2025.

Some economists say the full effects of its interest rate hikes are yet to work their way through the economy.

"It does take four to six quarters for the full impact of monetary policy tightening to take effect," said independent economist Elize Kruger.

Thomson Reuters

Based in Johannesburg, Nellie reports on general, economic and political news across sub-Saharan Africa. She previously spent six years in Dakar covering West and Central Africa. A U.S. national, she studied journalism and international affairs at Sciences Po, Paris. She was the recipient of Amnesty International's 2021 award for best new journalist for investigating sex abuse by aid workers in DR Congo.