Photo credit: Central Bank of Liberia

 

MONROVIA – 25 August 2020:The Board of Governors of the Central Bank of Liberia (CBL), during its 19 August 2020 sitting on Monetary Policy’s decision, agreed to retain the monetary policy rate of 25.0% based on a projected headline inflation of approximately 17.0% for quarter three of 2020. Price indices of energy and non-energy commodities in low and middle income countries fell in quarter two.

 

 

The announcement to maintain the current monetary policy rate is partly predicated on the evolving global economic dynamics, which has transmitted adverse effects to domestic economic developments. In May this year, the Central Bank lowered its monetary policy rate from 30.0% to 25.0%.

 

 

The CBL Board of Governors also decided to continue the suspension of the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) and the Remittance Split Policy to enhance stability of the financial sector.

 

 

Henceforth, it is announced that commercial banks will only be restricted to purchase the CBL Bill on a one to three-month period to allow for greater sterilization effect.

 

 

Global Developments

 

On the global front, two critical economic situations further motivated the CBL’s monetary policy decisions at the recent Board meeting, namely:

 

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COVID-19. The lockdowns, arising from COVID-19, triggered cutbacks in investments, supply chain disruptions and uncertainty, resulting to revision of global economic growth projections to negative 4.9% from negative 3.0% in 2020. In addition, inflation projections are put at 0.4% and 1.2% in advanced and emerging markets economies, respectively.

 

 

Monetary Policy Rates. In June 2020, monetary policy rates stabilized at 0.25% and 0.10% in the United States and United Kingdom, respectively and negative 0.50% in the European Union. In West Africa, some rates were eased, while others remained stable. For example, in The Gambia and Nigeria, monetary policy rates eased by 200 basis points to 10.0%, and 100 basis points to 12.5%, respectively; while Ghana and Sierra Leone maintained their monetary policy rates at 14.5% and 15.0%, respectively.

 

 

The Domestic Economy

 

 

Consistent with developments in the global economy, economic activity in Liberia is projected to contract by 2.5% in 2020, reflecting subdued activities in the secondary and tertiary sectors, despite forecast of modest economic improvement in the last quarter of the year.

 

 

At the quarter ended-June 2020, inflation moderated to 18.0%, a reduction by 5.7 percentage points in the previous quarter and projected to further moderate to 17.0% in quarter three. Net remittance inflow was US$48.4 million in the second quarter of 2020 and expected to rise beyond quarter three.

 

 

 

These developments, in addition to decisions of heightening financial education for increased retail subscriptions for the instruments and strengthening policy coordination with the fiscal authority on liquidity management to sustain the downward inflation spiral, prompted the CBL’s Board to keep the monetary policy rate unchanged at 25%.