"The Bank of Uganda, at the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting of August 2020 has maintained the Central Bank Rate (CBR) at 7 percent and remained committed to providing liquidity support to Supervised Financial Institutions (SFIs).
Economic activity is estimated to have contracted by 3.2 percent in the second quarter of 2020 as a result of a combination of COVID-19 containment measures and floods. The complementary fiscal and monetary policy actions have provided a foundation for the recovery of economic activity as the lockdown is relaxed.
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected both the demand and supply side of the economy. Whereas supply will initially recover in line with the easing of containment measures, demand will benefit only gradually from improvements in foreign demand and confidence levels, as well as continued support from fiscal and monetary policies. Eventually aggregate demand is likely to increase faster than supply, thereby absorbing excess capacity.
As the easing of the lockdown continues, the economy is expected to slowly recover, reflecting the effects of a slow rebound in both foreign and domestic demand and, subdued confidence on the part of households and firms. In addition, many consumers are expected to be hesitant to resume their previous spending patterns, partly due to fears of contracting the virus and uncertainty about earnings. Moreover, even those whose incomes were not affected may increase their need for precautionary savings. Furthermore, low exports of goods and subdued tourism receipts are projected to continue to weigh on economic growth given weaker global demand. Therefore, economic growth in Financial Year (FY) 2020/21 is projected in the range of 3.0-4.0 percent, further increasing to 5.0-6.0 percent in FY 2021/22. Economic growth is consequently expected to remain below the potential growth rate until FY 2022/23.
The economic outlook is extremely uncertain, largely because of the unpredictable intensity and duration of the pandemic. The downside risks to the economic growth projection include the possibility of a widespread and possibly more severe second wave of the virus, requiring a complete lockdown, as well as, the locust invasion. Moreover, Uganda remains highly vulnerable to recurring spouts of global financial volatility, stemming either from continued global economic weakness or the uncontrolled spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, increasing Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) and high lending interest rates could delay recovery of Private Sector Credit (PSC) extensions to pre-COVID levels. On the upside, economic growth could turn out stronger than projected if the spread of the virus is contained, or if a vaccine or effective treatment is available earlier than is currently being assumed. Such a scenario could lead to greater business and consumer confidence, factors which would likely lead to stronger economic growth.
Annual headline and core inflation rose to 4.7 percent and 5.8 percent, respectively, in July 2020, from corresponding levels of 4.1 percent and 4.9 percent in June 2020. The path for CPI inflation over the next 12 months largely reflects the influence of containment measures particularly on public transport and increases in prices of imported consumer goods as a result of higher taxes to support import substitution. However, the decline in food crop and energy prices and subdued demand could partly hold inflation down. Core inflation is expected to peak at 6.1 percent in the first quarter of 2021, while headline inflation could peak at 6.2 percent. In the medium term, the inflation outlook depends primarily on the speed and strength at which demand and supply recover.
Risks to the inflation outlook include a higher fiscal deficit and a more depreciated exchange rate due to the weakening external position. On the downside, domestic demand may take longer to recover despite the gradual easing of the lockdown. Moreover, food crop prices and external sources of inflation are likely to remain weak in the near-term amid the global economic downturn.
The balance of risks to the inflation forecast are assessed to be on the upside with core inflation expected to rise above the 5 percent target within 12 months, even though GDP growth is expected to remain below its potential levels. BoU has therefore decided to maintain the CBR at 7 percent. The band on the CBR has also been maintained at +/-2 percentage points, while the margin on the rediscount rate and bank rate is unchanged at 3 and 4 percentage points on the CBR, respectively. Consequently, the rediscount rate and the bank rate have been maintained at 10 percent and 11 percent, respectively.
The MPC is cognizant that its primary mandate is to achieve the medium-term target of CPI inflation of 5 percent. However, it noted that the extreme uncertainty characterises the outlook, which is heavily contingent upon the intensity, spread and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly the heightened risks associated with a second wave of infections. In these conditions, supporting the recovery of the economy is overriding in the conduct of monetary policy provided inflation remains in the range 5 percent percentage points."
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