Interest Rates in Frontier Markets Continue to Rise

April, 6, 2023

Central banks in the larger frontier markets (FM) continue to tighten monetary policy as annual CPI inflation rates climb while others are keeping interest rates elevated despite CPI inflation cooling, as illustrated in Fitch Ratings’ latest Frontier Vision chart pack.

FM central banks tightened monetary policy further in 1Q23 with interest rate rises in: Azerbaijan, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Guatemala, Jordan, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Rwanda, Senegal, Sri Lanka, Tunisia and Zambia. Only the central banks of Angola and Tajikistan bucked this trend and cut their policy rates – to 17% and 11%, respectively. As global inflationary pressures stemming from commodity and food prices ease, annual CPI inflation rates have fallen in recent months in: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Costa Rica, Ivory Coast, Gabon, Georgia, Jamaica, Rwanda, Senegal and Sri Lanka, among others.

Despite the US Federal Reserve raising its benchmark interest rate twice this year, some FM currencies have appreciated recently vs the US dollar – including the Armenian dram, Costa Rican colon and Georgian lari. However, currencies in Kenya, Mongolia, Pakistan, Rwanda, Suriname and Zambia have weakened against the dollar in recent months.

Fitch's quarterly ‘Frontier Vision’ chart pack tracks high-frequency macroeconomic data for the countries included in the J.P. Morgan’s Next Generation Markets (NEXGEM) Index. The charts cover five years of historical data and the choice of data series has been harmonised as far as possible across all countries to facilitate comparisons. The index comprises countries representing sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America & the Caribbean, the Middle East & North Africa, Europe, Asia and Oceania.

‘Frontier Vision’ is available at www.fitchratings.com

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