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SA central bank raises key rate by 25 basis points

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SA central bank raised ‌its key interest rate by 25 basis points to 7% this Thursday

South Africa’s (SA) central bank raised ‌its key interest rate by 25 basis points to 7% this Thursday, saying the decision was aimed at managing risks and ensuring that inflation returns to ⁠target.

 

The majority of economists polled by Reuters had expected a 25-basis-point increase in the policy rate, after inflation accelerated sharply in April.

 

Annual inflation was 4.0% in April, up from 3.1% in March, driven mainly by fuel price rises triggered by the United States-Israel war against ‌Iran.

 

The ⁠SA Reserve Bank (SARB) targets inflation of 3% with a tolerance band of 1 percentage point either side.

 

The SARB is now among only ⁠a handful of African central banks to have raised rates during the Iran war, joining others like Rwanda, Botswana ⁠and Mauritius.

 

Many other central banks on the continent, like their global peers, have kept ⁠rates unchanged while they assess war-driven inflation risks.

 

–Reuters–