ISLAMABAD (PEN) : The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Monday slashed the key policy rate by 250 basis points to 15%, marking its fourth consecutive cut as inflation remains in single digits through October.
Analysts as well independent economists widely believed the central bank would cut its key interest rate further at its policy meeting, with policymakers continuing their efforts to revive a fragile economy as inflation eases off recent record highs.
The central bank has slashed the benchmark policy rate to 17.5% from an all-time-high of 22% in three consecutive policy meetings since June, having last reduced it by 200 basis points in September.
A Reuters survey showed that all the 15 participants expected the central bank to cut rates. Two expect a 150-bps cut, twelve predict a 200-bps reduction, and one forecasts a 250-bps cut.
Economic activity has stabilised since last summer when the country came close to a default before an eleventh-hour bailout by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The IMF, which in September gave a boost to Pakistan’s struggling economy by approving a long-awaited $7 billion facility, said that the South Asian nation had taken key steps to restore economic stability with consistent policy implementation under the 2023-24 standby arrangement.
While the economy has started to gradually recover, and inflation has moved sharply down from a multi-decade high of nearly 40% in May 2023, analysts say further rate cuts are needed to bolster growth.
Mustafa Pasha, Chief Investment Officer at Lakson Investments, said rates must drop under 15% and hold below that for six months to have a material impact.
The IMF in its latest October report forecast Pakistan’s gross domestic product growth at 3.2% for the fiscal year ending June 2025, up from 2.4% in fiscal 2024.