Daily Nation Newspaper

RBZ TO LOWER BORROWING COSTS

- – THE HERALD, Zimbabwe.

HARARE- Monetary authoritie­s agree that there is need to lower the cost of borrowing in Zimbabwe to support high production in the economy, but are still studying key fundamenta­ls to see if that will not upset current stability.

Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) Governor Dr John Mangudya, said recently that the bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC), was still looking at the key economic fundamenta­ls and will look at possible interest rate review downwards in the new year.

The RBZ raised its policy rate to 35 percent from 15 percent in a bid to curb speculativ­e borrowing amid surging inflation.

A month earlier, in May this year, Zimbabwe had recorded an annual inflation rate of 785.55. The month- on-month inflation rate came in at 15.13 percent.

Generally, a bank policy rate is the rate used by central banks to implement or signal its monetary policy stance or preferred interest rate level, which guides the market. It is most commonly set by the central banks’ policy-making committees.

Zimbabwe’s policy rate was halved from 70 percent to 35 percent in November last year, and was cut in two further steps this year to 15 percent, partly to reduce the costs of those needing to borrow to cope with economic challenges arising from travel restrictio­ns and the lockdown imposed to limit risk of infection of Covid-19.

However, with inflation rates still high, and with special schemes announced at

lower interest rates for those most affected by lockdown provisions, the RBZ’s Monetary Policy Committee, has restored the 35 percent pertaining at the beginning of the year. The black market in foreign currency was being fuelled by speculativ­e behaviour, including influxes of borrowed funds.

The rise in general interest rates can be seen as part of the series of measures taken to starve the black market of liquidity, measures that include severe restrictio­ns on large anonymous transactio­ns made through mobile money transfer systems.

But the rise still keeps the policy rate below that of the later months of last year, even though inflation has been higher in recent weeks.

With the dropping of the old interbank system for setting exchange rates in favour of more open and transparen­t auctions, the RBZ wants to eliminate new distortion­s being introduced by speculator­s through cheap borrowing.

 ??  ?? Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Dr John Mangudya
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Dr John Mangudya

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