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South Africa’s Kganyago says central bank must keep rate options open amid inflation threat

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 12:11 PM

JOHANNESBURG, May 6 (Reuters) – South African Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago said on Wednesday that policymakers needed to keep their options open on interest rates as geopolitical shocks clouded the outlook ​and inflation expectations remained above target.

Kganyago said while inflation was ‌still not anchored at the central bank’s 3% target, it had continued to trend lower while debt appeared to be stabilising and growth had been a bit stronger.

South Africa’s headline inflation nudged higher to 3.1% in April from 3.0% in March, ‌as ​the effects of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, ⁠which have pushed domestic ⁠oil prices higher, had just begun to filter into the economy.

Africa’s largest economy is a net importer of oil, leaving it highly vulnerable to swings in global prices. Many economists expect inflation to rise ​above 4% in the coming months.

Speaking at an investment conference in the North West province, Kganyago said supply shocks from the conflict ⁠could lift domestic inflation higher while hurting ⁠output and that bringing inflation back to target after ​such shocks may also entail timely moves in interest rates.

“It is not desirable ​to put the economy under more pressure, but we need ‌to keep our options open,” he said.

Kganyago said geopolitical risk was now a more important factor than at any point in his career, with war-driven shocks raising food and fuel prices.

He said the policy rate ⁠could not affect global oil prices, but the central bank could manage inflation expectations through clear communication and, if needed, rate action.

“Success lies not in preventing ⁠higher inflation right ‌now, but in getting back to target after the ⁠shock has passed,” said Kganyago.

He said the rand had ​held ‌up well this year despite conflict in the ​Middle East, recovering ⁠quickly after an initial drop and trading mostly stronger than in 2025.

The South African Reserve Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee has held its main lending rate at 6.75% in its previous two meetings. The SARB will hold its next policy meeting on May 28.

(Reporting by Kopano Gumbi in Johannesburg; Editing ​by Nia Williams)