RBZ Raises Borrowing Rate From 50% To 70%
15 September 2019
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The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) said on Friday it had raised its overnight borrowing rate from 50% to 70% after a surge in inflation and a steep fall in the domestic currency.

Zimbabweans face triple-digit annual inflation as the government has taken steps to relaunch a national currency.

RBZ governor John Mangudya said in a monetary policy statement that increasing interest rates would stabilise inflation, last published at 175% in June, and ease pressure on the exchange rate.

The bank renamed the interim RTGS currency the Zimbabwe dollar on June 24. Since then it has lost 51% of its value to trade at 12.8878 to the US dollar on Friday, according to central bank data.

“The Bank expects inflation to start declining after the current high inflation cycle ends, as attested by ebbing exchange rate depreciation pressures, following the removal of the

multicurrency system,” Mangudya said.

The central bank added that it was introducing dollar-denominated savings bonds with a 3-year tenure and an interest rate of 7.5% to try to stimulate greater saving.

Finance minister Mthuli Ncube on Wednesday announced the appointment of a monetary policy committee at the central bank as part of a set of reforms aimed at removing economic

distortions and boosting confidence in policymaking.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government has taken steps to cut the budget deficit, remove subsidies on fuel and power and repeal laws curbing public and media freedoms, but those

reforms and austerity measures have compounded ordinary people’s hardships.

— Reuters