The Zimbabwe 
National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC) has urged the Reserve Bank of 
Zimbabwe (RBZ) to lower its bank policy rate from the current 35% to 20%
 in an effort to ease growing credit constraints in the market and 
stimulate production in a liquidity-starved economy.
The 
recommendation, contained in the ZNCC's latest report presented at its 
annual congress in Victoria Falls, comes amid tightening monetary and 
fiscal policies aimed at reinforcing confidence in the newly introduced 
Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency. However, the business chamber warns that 
these hawkish measures have exacerbated the ongoing liquidity crunch, 
threatening to stifle productivity and worsen the country's economic 
challenges.
The RBZ hiked the policy rate from 20% to 35% earlier
 this year to curb speculative borrowing, a move that has since drawn 
concern from both industry and financial experts.
"The central 
bank should consider reducing the bank policy rate from 35% to 
approximately 20%," ZNCC said. "This adjustment would help alleviate 
credit constraints on productive sectors while still maintaining a real 
positive interest rate."
In addition to recommending a rate cut, 
the Chamber called on the RBZ to reconsider recent increases in 
statutory reserve requirements, warning that they may further strain 
liquidity in both the local and foreign currency markets. The RBZ had 
raised statutory reserve requirements by 15 percentage points for local 
currency and 10 percentage points for foreign currency deposits.
Currently,
 reserve requirements for savings and time deposits stand at 15% for 
both currencies, while demand and call deposits are pegged at a steep 
30%.
"These requirements may exacerbate the liquidity strain," 
ZNCC said. "The authorities should re-evaluate these levels to balance 
liquidity provision with financial stability."
While 
acknowledging that the 2025 Monetary Policy Statement outlines key 
commitments - including price stability, exchange rate management, and 
efforts to build foreign exchange reserves - ZNCC noted that the real 
challenge lies in execution. The Chamber warned that weak market 
confidence and poor coordination with fiscal authorities could undermine
 the central bank's efforts to stabilise the economy.
"While the 
policy intentions are sound, their success will depend on practical 
implementation, market response, and alignment with fiscal strategy," 
the report noted.
Concerns about the sustainability of the ZiG 
currency and the general macroeconomic environment also loom large, 
particularly as inflationary pressures remain and access to affordable 
credit continues to dwindle.
Adding his voice at the congress, 
banker and financial analyst Tawanda Nyambirai criticised Zimbabwe's 
high reserve requirements, saying they were out of sync with regional 
standards. He compared Zimbabwe's 30% reserve ratio with South Africa's 
2.5%, saying the disparity significantly raises the cost of money in 
Zimbabwe.
"When you calculate the cost, if you lend money, you 
have to take into account the amount of money that is housed and is 
gathered and collected in Zimbabwe," said Nyambirai. "Under such 
conditions, local banks cannot operate competitively."
The ZNCC's
 recommendations underscore growing pressure on the RBZ to recalibrate 
its monetary policy framework to boost credit flows, restore market 
confidence, and revive economic activity amid widespread liquidity 
shortages. As the ZiG currency continues to define Zimbabwe's new 
monetary era, how the central bank responds to these challenges could 
determine the broader economic trajectory in the months ahead.
 - Newsday	
	
	
	
       
	   
	   
	   
	   	   
	   
	
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