Report Shows High Increase In Borrowing Costs Is Surprising

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Contrary to the consensus view expressed by many economists that the repo rate would be raised by only 25 basis points (bsp) on 30 March, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) decided by a 3:2 vote to raise interest rates again by 50 bsp.

In commenting on the decision to increase the repo rate, Prof Raymond Parsons, economist from the North-West University (NWU) Business School, says the MPC majority view sees the risks to inflation on the upside – shaped by both domestic and global factors.

“With the battle against inflation not yet seen as conclusively won, it was inevitable that the MPC would continue with its interest-rate-raising cycle for now. The extent of the increase in borrowing costs was nonetheless surprising given the cross-currents and uncertainties that the MPC itself recognised in its statement.”

Prof Parsons explains that, apart from the risks to the inflation outlook identified by the MPC, the committee has also further reduced its growth forecast for 2023 from 0,3% to 0,2%. This compares with the recent growth forecast of only 0,1% by the International Monetary Fund.

“Bearing in mind that the interest-rate-raising cycle already commenced in November 2021, higher borrowing costs are already now beginning to take effect on many sectors of the economy. More importantly, the cumulative effects of previous interest rate increases now happen to coincide with an economy that is seen by many commentators to be on the brink of a possible “technical recession”.

According to him this is mainly the outcome of the electricity crisis, which the MPC statement emphasised.

“It is therefore arguable whether the MPC is right to see the risks to the growth outlook as ‘balanced’, and is possibly too optimistic. The latest MPC statement offers no assessment of recession risks. The optics of yet much higher interest rates being imposed on an economy that may be on the brink of recession are not good. The question is whether ever-higher interest rates are conducive to the growth South Africa needs to attract foreign direct investment.”

Prof Parsons believes it would have been helpful if the MPC statement had also outlined why two members of the committee, looking at the same data, opted for only a 25 bsp rise. “It seems as if the downside risks to economic growth are beginning to broadly coincide with the upside risks to inflation. The burden of proof for the MPC in current economic circumstances cannot be an absolute certainty, and hence a cautious approach remains appropriate. A small mistake in monetary policy could now prove costly.”