Emerging market central banks are spearheading a wave of interest rate hikes as inflation resurfaces due to the Iran conflict. According to Jin10, these central banks are acting more swiftly than their counterparts in developed economies, which are largely holding steady to assess economic impacts. Since the conflict began in late February, at least ten emerging and frontier market central banks have raised rates, with Indonesia, Rwanda, South Africa, and Sri Lanka tightening policies in the past two weeks. Policymakers in the U.S., Eurozone, Japan, and Canada have maintained their positions, while Norway and Australia are among the few developed economies to have increased rates.
Bjørn, a senior portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments, noted that emerging market central banks are drawing lessons from the last global tightening cycle. During that period, many acted ahead of developed markets to address post-pandemic inflation shocks and were more cautious in easing rates as price pressures subsided. These central banks are also tightening policies to support their currencies and prevent capital outflows, with expectations of more following suit.