In a move that is aimed at managing the increasing inflation rate, Nigeria’s apex bank has raised the benchmark for the lending rate to 18 percent.
The bank’s governor, Godwin Emefiele, announced the new interest rate bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting that began Monday. He said the committee voted to keep the asymmetric corridor at +100 and -500 basis points around the MPR.
Mr. Emefiele disclosed that the MPC voted to keep the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) at 32.5 percent, as well as the Liquidity Ratio at 30 percent.
Under the cash reserve ratio (CRR), commercial banks have to hold a certain minimum amount of deposits as reserves with the central bank. The percentage of cash required to be kept in reserves against the bank’s total deposits is called the Cash Reserve Ratio.
The inflation rate for February 2023 in Nigeria hit 21.91% as cash and fuel scarcity continue to bite hard in the West African country.
Emefiele believed that consistency in the recent monetary policies by the apex bank is helping to manage rates.
“We believe that as we continue this process that inflation will eventually begin to trend downwards,” he said.
“Whether we like it or not, between now and May, or the end of the administration, we will expect that subsidy will disappear. Subsidy removal has its own implication on prices which is inflation, so we are not optimistic that prices will continue to come down because of these measures but we feel we need to continue to tighten,” he said.
Nigeria has been on a recent trend of monetary policy in a bid to rescue its struggling economy. The bank recently introduce new designs of the N200, N500, and N1,000 in a move to mop excess cash circulation. According to the CBN, over 80% of cash in circulation was outside the banking system when the policy was announced.