Cape Times

Emphasis is on stimulatin­g growth for African banks

- Vuyani Ndaba

AFRICA’S major central banks are entering an easing cycle as they try to stimulate growth after months of drought, austerity drives and confidence issues across the continent, a poll found yesterday.

Much of southern and eastern Africa is still recovering after an El Niño-related drought that wilted crops last year. Poor business confidence in South Africa and foreign exchange restrictio­ns in Nigeria have also hampered growth.

“We expect that African monetary policy is entering a widespread and protracted period of policy easing. This will provide a boost to growth,” said John Ashbourne, Africa analyst at Capital Economics.

Ghana, which agreed on a three-year fiscal discipline deal with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in exchange for aid in 2015, cut 100 basis points from its benchmark interest rate in May and is expected to do the same on Monday, putting it at 21.50 percent.

Medians in the poll predict South Africa will make a first quarter trim of 25 basis points to 6.75 percent and while Kenya will hold steady on Monday it is expected to cut 100 basis points to 9 percent in the second quarter of next year.

Nigeria is expected to hold rates at 14 percent on Tuesday, and through this year, but will reduce borrowing costs by 175 basis points across 2018.

Battered confidence

Aly-Khan Satchu, chief executive of Nairobi-based Rich Management, said policymake­rs in Africa’s biggest economies have lost credibilit­y and it would be difficult to regain that.

To try to reduce demand for dollars, Nigeria banned the importing of 41 items, but that only fuelled the gap between the official and black market rates for its naira currency.

The policy, alongside a commodity price slump that hurt oil exports, has since 2015 forced its central bank to hike the benchmark rate 300 basis points to 14 percent as it tried to deal with much faster inflation and restore the currency’s strength.

Nigeria – Africa’s biggest economy – fell into recession for the first time in 25 years in 2016, but is expected to turn in growth of 1 percent this year and 2.5 percent the following.

South Africa is expected to expand 0.7 percent this year after escaping a six-month recession last quarter that was partly due to weak confidence and drought.

Confidence in South Africa’s economy has been sapped by the chopping and changing of finance ministers four time since the end of 2015 by President Jacob Zuma. The last change in March triggered a credit rating downgrade to “junk” status.

Kenya is expected to grow 5.2 percent this year and 5.9 percent next. Growth slowed to 4.7 percent in the first quarter, hit by a credit slow down after authoritie­s late last year capped the interest banks could charge on loans.

However, Ghana is expected to fare better than most, growing 6.1 and 6.8 percent in 2017 and 2018 respective­ly. – Reuters

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