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Tanzania central bank asks commercial banks to cut lending rates
DAR ES SALAAM (Capital Markets in Africa) – Tanzania’s central bank has asked commercial banks to consider lowering their lending rates to help spark credit growth in east Africa’s second-largest economy.
Bank of Tanzania cut its discount rate to 12 percent from 16 percent effectively from March 6, the first time it has lowered borrowing costs since 2013, after a steep drop in private-sector credit growth last year.
There were expectations that the move “will enhance credit growth and reduction in lending rates,” central bank Governor Benno Ndulu said in a statement late on Friday after a meeting with chief executives of commercial banks in Dar es Salaam.
Bank of Tanzania’s decision to slash the rate it charges commercial lenders to borrow from it — one of its main monetary policy tools — came after lending to the private sector grew by 2.5 percent in 2016 after expanding 26.8 percent a year earlier, according to official data.
The International Monetary Fund warned in January that tight fiscal and monetary policies threatened Tanzania’s forecast for growth of around 7 percent in fiscal year 2016/17, which ends in June.
Source: Reuters Africa News