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South Africa's Central Bank will redraft an adverse risk scenario at the next rate setting meeting

South Africa's Central Bank will redraft an adverse risk scenario at the next rate setting meeting
South Africa's Central Bank will redraft an adverse risk scenario at the next rate setting meeting

The South African central bank's governor said that the rising oil prices are forcing the central bank to re-evaluate its risk scenarios. The central bank will decide on interest rates on March 26, after keeping the main lending rate at 6.75%, in a split decision in late January. Policy makers at that time cited they wanted to see inflation expectations drop further.

Kganyago said that "we had a baseline" (in the meeting in January) and that we had both an optimistic and an adverse scenario. The latter assumed the average oil price per barrel for the year would be $75 and the rand's weakness to 18.50 dollars.

He said, "The previous negative scenario is gone. It was in the past. We will create a new one."

The rand has weakened to 16.82 cents per dollar this week despite the Middle East Crisis triggered by Israel's bombing Iran and Washington's bombing Iran.

Kganyago stated that a 10% change in the exchange rate will have a greater impact on inflation in South Africa than an equivalent jump in oil prices.

Kganyago stated that although it was a negative scenario, it did not play out as badly as anticipated. He added that policymakers would only become concerned when they saw the effect of the exchange rate on prices.

"As a policy maker, you have to decide if this is transitory or persistent. You only react to the persistent and not the transitory, which is not easy to do. (Reporting and editing by Rodrigo Campos; Karin Strohecker)

(source: Reuters)