Nigeria's central bank cuts lending rate
Nigeria's central bank cuts lending rate

Nigeria's central bank cuts lending rate

Low oil prices have taken their toll on the continent's top producer, which relies on crude sales for 90% of foreign exchange earnings.
Phillepus Uusiku
By Alexis Akwagyiram

Nigeria's central bank cut its benchmark lending rate by 100 basis points to 11.5% in a surprise move aimed at stimulating growth in Africa's largest economy.

Nigeria's economy, badly hit by the coronavirus pandemic, contracted 6.1% in the second quarter and now faces possible recession in the third quarter, with the government expecting the economy to contract by as much as 8.9% this year.

Low oil prices have also taken their toll on the continent's top producer, which relies on crude sales for 90% of foreign exchange earnings.

Central bank governor Godwin Emefiele said six of the 10 members of the monetary policy committee voted for the cut, one for a 50-point reduction and three for holding the rate.

Loosening monetary policy "would complement the bank's commitment to sustaining the trajectory of the economic recovery and reduce the negative impact of Covid-19", he said.

Inflation

Emefiele said the cut aimed to force banks to lend to help the economy despite rising inflation.

He said inflation was mainly due to supply side constraints, adding that cheaper credit to the domestic economy would stimulate growth.

The central bank has said it aims to maintain inflation within a target range of 6% to 9%. But annual inflation rose in August for the 12th successive month to a more-than two-year high of 13.22% as the pandemic disrupted the supply of goods and services.

In May, the bank cut the rate by 100 basis points to 12.5% the first reduction since March 2019 and the largest since 2015. The bank's monetary policy committee voted to hold the rate at its last meeting in July.

"Given Nigeria's budgetary pressures, creating an environment that is more conducive to local financing of the deficit is understandable," said Razia Khan, chief economist for Africa at Standard Chartered bank. "There will be no immediate inflation relief, however well-intentioned the policy."

Financial markets were closed when the decision was taken. Money market rates opened at historic lows of between 0.5% and 1%, while the naira currency eased to 467 per dollar on the black market due to the excess naira liquidity, traders said. – Nampa/Reuters

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Republikein 2025-05-18

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