Kenya: Unintended consequences of interest rate caps, as banks withdraw lending

Interest rate caps: Budget office proposes review of law

Kenyan banks have been unwilling to lend to the private sector, preferring the government through risk-free Treasury-bills and bonds.

Analysts say that new interest rate framework should be developed to ensure that banks respond to monetary policy signals from CBK since they have been reluctant to do so even before the interest rate caps.

The Banking (Amendment) Act of 2016 came into force in September of that year.

Kenya’s Parliamentary Budget Office has proposed a review of the interest rate cap law to boost lending to households and businesses, and give the Central Bank the freedom to use its policy rate to control money supply, inflation and exchange rates.

Improving monetary policy

The Central Bank is unable to adjust the central bank rate (CBR) as it will simultaneously change deposit and lending rates, leading to volatility and instability in the financial markets.

“The interest rate controls have affected the flexibility of the key monetary policy tool, the CBR itself,” said the Parliamentary Budget Office in a report released last a week ago.

“This law may require further streamlining to ensure that the profitability of banks is not compromised and to improve Monetary Policy flexibility.”However, analysts say that while the proposal to lift the cap is important, a new interest rate framework should be developed to ensure that banks respond to monetary policy signals from Central Bank since they have been reluctant to do so even before the interest rate caps.“CBK’s monetary policy instrument was not effective because there was no linkage between CBR and lending rates and so the banks could not respond even if CBK adjusted its policy rate,” the analyst said.

CBR
The Banking (Amendment) Act of 2016 came into force in September of that year. It fixed lending rates at four percentage points above the CBR, and a floor on term deposit rates equal to 70 per cent of the CBR. Since then, CBK has retained its policy rate at 10 per cent.

According to the World Bank, interest rate caps undermine monetary policy transmission and implementation, with implications for CBK’s independence and its ability to steer the economy.

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