Namibia’s central bank has raised its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points

The Bank of Namibia lifted its repo rate to 6.75%, marking a shift from its recent holding pattern and signalling increased concern over the inflation outlook, which has been pushed higher by rising oil prices and imported cost pressures.
The decision comes as policymakers respond to a more challenging global environment shaped by volatile commodity markets and lingering geopolitical uncertainty that continues to affect transport and fuel costs across import-dependent economies.
In its statement, the central bank said the rate increase was aimed at safeguarding price stability and maintaining macroeconomic resilience, particularly as inflation expectations begin to edge higher.
Namibia’s monetary policy decisions are closely linked to developments in South Africa due to the Namibian dollar’s peg to the South African rand, meaning interest rate movements in Pretoria often influence policy direction in Windhoek.
South Africa’s central bank recently raised its own key rate by 25 basis points to 7%, citing similar inflation pressures driven largely by energy costs linked to global geopolitical tensions.
The Namibian economy has remained relatively stable, but growth remains modest and sensitive to external shocks, especially shifts in fuel prices and global demand for key exports such as minerals.
Economists say the latest move reflects a cautious balancing act by the central bank, which must contain inflation without significantly constraining economic activity in an already slow-growth environment.
Food and transport inflation remain key pressure points for households, while businesses face higher input costs that could feed into broader price increases if energy prices remain elevated.
The central bank also signalled that future policy decisions will depend on incoming data, particularly trends in global oil prices, exchange rate stability and domestic demand conditions.
Analysts expect monetary policy across southern Africa to remain relatively tight in the near term as central banks continue to respond to imported inflation risks rather than domestic demand overheating.
For Namibia, the rate hike underscores a broader regional trend of cautious policy tightening aimed at protecting currency stability and containing inflationary spillovers from global energy markets.
The central bank said it will continue to monitor risks closely while maintaining its commitment to supporting long-term economic stability and preserving the credibility of its inflation-targeting framework.
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Emmanuel Abara Benson is a business journalist and editor covering artificial intelligence, global markets, and emerging technology.
He has previously worked with Business Insider Africa and Nairametrics, reporting on finance, startups, and innovation.
His work focuses on AI, digital economy, and global tech trends.
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