Zambia hikes key rate for first time since 2015

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Zambia hikes key rate for first time since 2015
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Governor Denny Kalyalya says the kwacha’s 13% slide against the dollar in 2019 could push it beyond central bank's inflation target range

Lusaka — Zambia’s central bank raised its key interest rate for the first time since November 2015 in a bid to stabilise its currency, which is the world’s fourth-worst performer against the dollar this year.

While the southern Africa nation’s annual inflation rate of 7.7% in April is within the central bank’s target range of 6% to 8%, effects from the kwacha’s 13% slide against the dollar in 2019 could push it beyond that range. The increase in borrowing costs could help support the currency. Food prices could rise further after Zambia’s harvest of maize, a staple, fell to an estimated 2 million metric tons this year, the lowest in a decade.

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