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Zimbabwe Sets Key Interest Rate at 60% to Halt Dollar Plunge

Zimbabwe Hikes Key Interest Rate to 60% to Halt Currency Plunge

Zimbabwe’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate to 60%, from 40%, as it attempts to stabilize a free-falling currency and rein in surging inflation. 

The decision comes 17 days after the central bank hinted it would implement a plan to curb speculative borrowing that’s fueled a decline in the value of the Zimbabwe dollar. The southern African nation last hiked its key interest rate in February. 

The monetary policy committee “expressed concern regarding the recent increase in month-on-month inflation, driven mainly by the resurgence in the volatility of the parallel-market exchange rate,” central-bank Governor John Mangudya said in a statement on the monetary authority’s website. The inflation rate rose to 54.5% in October from a year earlier, compared with 51.5% the previous month, he said.

Zimbabwe’s dollar has plunged on the parallel market to about Z$180 per U.S. dollar, nearly double the official exchange rate of Z$97.13. Instability in the foreign-exchange market is being driven by an unrelenting increase in money supply, increasing imports and long delays in settlement at the central bank’s weekly currency auction, according to the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries, the country’s largest business lobby group.

The weekly foreign-exchange auction will be refined and foreign currency allotments will be paid within two weeks from the date the auction is held, according to Mangudya.

In 2008, the currency plunged and a bout of hyperinflation decimated savings and resulted in shortages. The Zimbabwe dollar was scrapped early the next year and the use of foreign currencies was legalized. The Zimbabwe dollar was only reintroduced in 2019 at parity with the American currency, but quickly plummeted. 

Read more: Zimbabwe Business Warns Currency in Peril, Urges Policy Response

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