Economy April 7, 2026

RBNZ Holds Cash Rate at 2.25% as It Watches Inflation Risks from Middle East Conflict

Reserve Bank pauses for a second meeting, warning of timely hikes if energy-driven inflation rises

By Sofia Navarro
RBNZ Holds Cash Rate at 2.25% as It Watches Inflation Risks from Middle East Conflict

New Zealand’s central bank left the official cash rate at 2.25% for a second straight decision, choosing to wait as policymakers assess the inflationary impact of the Middle East war. The hold was widely anticipated by economists, coming after substantial easing last year and amid signs headline inflation is rising above the target band. The bank signalled readiness to tighten policy again if core inflation and wage pressures do not align with its 2% midpoint objective.

Key Points

  • RBNZ kept the official cash rate at 2.25% for a second straight meeting; the hold was fully expected by economists in the poll.
  • Headline inflation is at 3.1%, outside the 1% to 3% target range, and central bank slides suggest inflation could exceed 4% this year.
  • The decision and outlook are likely to impact energy and transport sectors via higher fuel and freight costs, and will influence financial markets and interest-rate expectations regionally.

WELLINGTON, April 8 - New Zealand’s central bank kept its policy rate at 2.25% on Wednesday for the second consecutive meeting, opting to pause as it evaluates how the Middle East war may influence inflation and growth. The decision was fully priced in by the market, with all 32 economists in a poll forecasting the Reserve Bank would maintain the official cash rate.

The pause follows an aggressive easing cycle last year, with the central bank cutting rates by 325 basis points since August 2024 as inflation eased and economic activity softened. That policy mix is now being reassessed as headline inflation has moved to 3.1%, which sits outside the Reserve Banks 1% to 3% target range.

In its Monetary Policy Review accompanying the decision, the Bank said the committee weighed the trade-off between moving pre-emptively to counter a risk of higher medium-term inflation and the potential cost of unnecessarily hindering the economic recovery. The statement read:

"The Committee's decision to hold the OCR balances the potential benefits of responding pre-emptively to the risk of higher medium-term inflation against the cost of unnecessarily stifling the economic recovery."

The central bank does not publish exhaustive economic projections in the monetary policy review itself, but slides released ahead of the press conference indicated the Bank expected inflation to rise above 4% this year. In its February outlook, the Bank had projected that annual inflation had peaked in December 2025 and would trend back toward the 2.0% midpoint of the target range by mid-2027.

Officials noted that the scale of any near-term pickup in headline inflation hinges on how the Middle East conflict unfolds and on the magnitude and duration of disruptions to global supply chains and energy markets. The statement underscored that the committee remains focused on returning inflation to the 2% midpoint in the medium term, which requires containment of core inflation and wage growth as well as persistence of medium and long-term inflation around 2%.

"If these conditions are not met, decisive and timely increases in the OCR would be required,"

The economic backdrop remains challenging. Although New Zealand has emerged from recession, growth is described as anaemic and is facing additional pressure from the Middle East turmoil. The statement pointed to persistent uncertainty about the broader global implications of the war and noted that a tight fiscal stance is further constraining activity.

Earlier on Wednesday, a two-week ceasefire agreed by the United States, Israel and Iran briefly pushed oil prices sharply lower, but the Bank said markets remained uneasy about whether a pause in fighting would produce durable relief for energy markets.

Policy approaches overseas were highlighted as a context for the Banks stance. Central banks globally have shifted toward an inflation-first approach in response to the Iran war, the Bank observed. Markets have pared back expectations of rate cuts, and some regions are even contemplating renewed tightening. The Federal Reserve has remained on hold and cautioned that an energy shock could keep price pressures elevated.

In Australia, the Reserve Bank has already increased rates twice this year to 4.10%, and market pricing implies a better-than-even chance of an increase to 4.35% in May. That divergence in regional monetary settings adds to the policy complexity faced by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand as it monitors inflation dynamics and the path of the recovery.


The Banks choice to wait while keeping the option to tighten underscores a cautious approach: acknowledge emerging inflationary impulses without pre-emptively disrupting a fragile recovery. The Committees forward guidance puts emphasis on a return to 2% inflation over the medium term and makes clear that further tightening is on the table if core gauges and wages fail to align with that target.

Risks

  • Escalation or prolonged disruption from the Middle East conflict could push fuel and transport prices higher, adding to domestic inflation pressures - affecting energy and transport sectors.
  • Anaemic domestic growth combined with a tight fiscal stance increases vulnerability to shocks and constrains the policy response, impacting overall economic recovery and interest-sensitive sectors.
  • If core inflation and wage growth do not remain contained, the Bank has signalled that decisive and timely increases in the OCR would be required, posing upside risk to borrowing costs and financial markets.

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