CBK brushes aside cost pressures to hold rates again
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The Central Bank of
Kenya (CBK) has brushed aside cost pressures to leave its benchmark lending
rate unchanged again at the 13th straight Monetary Policy
Committee (MPC) meeting on Tuesday.
In a statement sent
out after MPC meeting, the reserve bank has acknowledged the gathering dark
clouds of uncertainty but says the economy remains well placed to weather the
storm.
“Leading indicators
point to a strong performance of the Kenyan economy in the first quarter of
2022 supported by robust activity in construction, information and
communication, wholesale and retail trade, transport and storage and
manufacturing sectors.
The economy is
expected to remain resilient supported by recovery in agriculture and continued
strong performance of the services sector despite the downside risks to global
growth in 2022,” the CBK stated.
The CBK expects
inflation to hold within the government’s target band of 2.5 and 7.5 per cent
even as the risk of inflationary pressures emerges from the prevailing global
uncertainties.
The monetary
agent’s confidence is backed on government measures to stabilize fuel prices
and lower electricity tariffs.
Three MPC surveys’
conducted ahead of Tuesday’s policy meeting have revealed continued optimism
about business activity, employment and economic growth prospects in the
near-term.
“Nevertheless,
respondents were concerned about the impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on
commodity prices and supply chains, in addition to the increased political
activity,” the CBK noted.
Further, the CBK
has anchored the resilience of the economy on rebounding tax revenues following
eased COVID-19 containment measures and the continued execution of the economic
recovery strategy by the government.
Growth in private
sector credit has improved to 9.1 per cent as of February from 8.6 per cent in
December 2021.
Nevertheless, banks
have marked a slight deterioration in asset quality with the industry’s mean
non-performing loans (NPLs) ratio rising back to 14 per cent from a lower 13.1
per cent in December 2021.

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