South African Reserve Bank cuts interest rates

South Africa’s central bank cut its main lending rate by 25 basis points to 6.75% on Thursday at the first meeting since its inflation target was lowered, easing concerns that the new target would prevent it from cutting rates.

The decision by members of the bank’s Monetary Policy Committee was unanimous.

“Members agreed there was scope now to make the policy stance less restrictive, in the context of an improved inflation outlook,” Governor Lesetja Kganyago told a news conference.

The bank made small downward revisions to its inflation forecasts for 2025 and 2026.

Economists polled by Reuters had been divided on what Thursday’s policy decision would be.

Some thought the committee would take a cautious stance given its new 3% inflation target, while others thought there was room for a rate cut with inflation only slightly above target and within a 1-percentage-point “tolerance band” set by the finance minister.

There has been a long list of positive developments since the last monetary policy meeting in September.

South Africa was removed from a “grey list” of countries subject to increased monitoring for illicit money flows, its sovereign credit rating was upgraded by S&P Global and its mid-year budget review was well-received by investors.

Government borrowing costs have fallen and the rand hit its best level since 2023 against the dollar.

“We remain on track to deliver 3% inflation over the medium term,” Kganyago said. “The tolerance band … does not mean we will be indifferent to inflation anywhere between 2% and 4%. We want to be at 3%.”

The governor, who had for years advocated for a lower inflation target before last week’s formal change, added that the central bank only expected to breach the tolerance band when there are severe shocks.

Given that monetary policy actions have their main effects after 12 to 24 months, people should expect the central bank to hit its target over that time frame, Kganyago added.

  • Reporting by Kopano Gumbi, Sfundo Parakozov and Anathi Madubela.
You have read 1 out of 5 free articles. Log in or register for unlimited access.

Panyaza Lesufi broke all the promises he made for 2025

24 Feb 2026

MK Party takes no responsibility for South Africans lured to Russia-Ukraine war

24 Feb 2026

DA-led Cape Town accused of land dispossession and entrenching spatial apartheid

24 Feb 2026

The plan to stop South Africa’s FMD storm

24 Feb 2026

South African government ignores calls to reject key Trump ally

24 Feb 2026

Investigation launched into trapped workers at South African mine

24 Feb 2026

Talks begin for loosening BEE rules, and SIU exposes Home Affairs visa syndicate

24 Feb 2026

Major changes to BEE on the cards for South Africa

24 Feb 2026

South Africa’s new electricity crisis

23 Feb 2026

What South Africa needs to win the war on crime

23 Feb 2026