As the inflation rate continues on its persistent upward trajectory, the Monetary Policy Commit­tee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has raised the benchmark on interest rate by 150 basis points, from the 24.75 percent held in March 2024 to 26.25 percent.

CBN governor, Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, disclosed this on Tues­day while briefing Finance Cor­respondents shortly after the committee’s meeting at the CBN headquarters in Abuja.

While announcing the com­mittee’s decisions, Mr. Cardoso, who chaired the 295th meet­ing, said the committee voted to “raise the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) by 150 basis points to 26.25 percent from 24.75 percent, retain the asymmetric corridor around the MPR to +100/-300 basis points, retain the Cash Re­serve Ratio of Deposit Money Banks at 45.00 percent, and re­tain the Liquidity Ratio at 30.00 percent”.

Speaking on the committee’s consideration, the CBN governor said the key focus of the meeting remained to achieve price stabil­ity by effectively using tools avail­able to the monetary authority to rein in inflation.

He said the members observed that while year-on-year headline inflation in April 2024 rose mod­erately, the month-on-month mea­sures of headline, food and core all declined significantly.

“This follows a decline (month-on-month) of headline and food measures in March 2024, suggest­ing that the recent tight mone­tary policy stance of the bank is beginning to yield the desired outcomes”, he said.

Cardoso said the MPC noted that the inflationary pressure continues to be driven largely by food inflation, thus reiterated several challenges confronting the effective moderation of food inflation to include: rising cost of transportation of farm produce; infrastructure-related constraints along the line of distribution network; security challenges in some food producing areas; and exchange rate pass-through to domestic prices for imported food items.

Therefore, the MPC urged that more be done to address the se­curity of farming communities to guarantee improved food pro­duction in these areas.

According to him, the mem­bers further observed the recent volatility in the foreign exchange market, attributing this to sea­sonal demand, a reflection of the interplay between demand and supply in a freely functioning market system.

The committee also noted the marginal increase in the external reserve balance between March and April 2024 and urged the bank to sustain its focus on accretion to reserves.

He said the MPC, however, commended the bank for the recent approval of licences of fourteen International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs), which is expected to improve competition and lower the cost of transactions, thus attracting more remittances through formal channels.

The committee, according to him, also noted with satisfaction that the banking system remains safe, sound, and stable, despite the headwinds confronting the economy.