Lending interest rate (%) - Country Ranking

Definition: Lending rate is the bank rate that usually meets the short- and medium-term financing needs of the private sector. This rate is normally differentiated according to creditworthiness of borrowers and objectives of financing. The terms and conditions attached to these rates differ by country, however, limiting their comparability.

Source: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics and data files.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Madagascar 48.28 2021
2 Zimbabwe 45.48 2021
3 Argentina 35.56 2021
4 Somalia 33.67 1988
5 Brazil 30.02 2021
6 Malawi 24.22 2020
7 Tajikistan 23.55 2019
8 Dem. Rep. Congo 23.06 2021
9 Lao PDR 22.61 2010
10 Yemen 22.08 2013
11 Uzbekistan 21.40 2021
12 Venezuela 21.06 2017
13 Uganda 19.85 2018
14 The Gambia 19.50 2021
15 Angola 19.40 2021
16 São Tomé and Principe 19.11 2020
17 Mozambique 18.17 2021
18 Iran 18.00 2016
19 Sierra Leone 17.94 2020
20 Kyrgyz Republic 17.04 2020
21 Mauritania 17.00 2017
22 Mongolia 16.93 2020
23 Tanzania 16.68 2020
24 Azerbaijan 16.43 2021
25 Rwanda 16.18 2021
26 Honduras 15.97 2021
27 Afghanistan 14.84 2017
28 Myanmar 14.83 2020
29 Suriname 14.81 2021
30 Bhutan 14.00 2021
31 Ukraine 13.29 2021
32 Liberia 13.25 2017
33 Haiti 13.05 2021
34 Guinea 12.88 2001
35 Burundi 12.63 2021
36 Georgia 12.51 2021
37 Paraguay 12.51 2021
38 Iraq 12.36 2016
39 Guatemala 12.19 2021
40 Kenya 12.08 2021
41 Jamaica 12.06 2020
42 Armenia 11.76 2021
43 Nigeria 11.48 2021
44 Sri Lanka 11.24 2019
45 Uruguay 11.23 2020
46 Timor-Leste 11.16 2021
47 Peru 10.98 2021
48 Solomon Islands 10.68 2020
49 Lebanon 10.51 2019
50 Belarus 10.12 2021
51 Nicaragua 9.62 2021
52 Dominican Republic 9.61 2021
53 Zambia 9.48 2020
54 Egypt 9.43 2021
55 Colombia 9.34 2021
56 Seychelles 9.16 2021
57 Lesotho 8.98 2020
58 Indonesia 8.92 2021
59 Guyana 8.88 2021
60 India 8.70 2021
61 Pakistan 8.67 2021
62 Papua New Guinea 8.65 2019
63 Croatia 8.58 2014
64 Samoa 8.54 2021
65 Belize 8.44 2021
66 Cabo Verde 8.19 2020
67 Barbados 8.05 2021
68 Bolivia 8.02 2021
69 Algeria 8.00 2021
69 Ethiopia 8.00 2008
71 Comoros 7.88 2021
72 Vietnam 7.81 2021
73 Tonga 7.76 2021
74 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 7.65 2021
75 Trinidad and Tobago 7.44 2021
76 Antigua and Barbuda 7.41 2021
77 Moldova 7.40 2021
78 Bangladesh 7.32 2021
79 Eswatini 7.25 2021
80 St. Kitts and Nevis 7.14 2021
81 Philippines 7.10 2019
82 South Africa 7.04 2021
83 Jordan 7.04 2021
84 Panama 6.94 2021
85 Mauritius 6.87 2021
86 Namibia 6.86 2021
87 St. Lucia 6.77 2021
88 Russia 6.73 2021
89 Grenada 6.55 2021
90 Dominica 6.30 2021
91 Burkina Faso 6.25 2021
91 Benin 6.25 2021
93 Albania 6.02 2021
94 Libya 6.00 2014
95 Fiji 5.94 2021
96 Montenegro 5.76 2021
97 Romania 5.61 2021
98 Costa Rica 5.51 2021
99 Brunei 5.50 2021
100 Oman 5.50 2021
101 Iceland 5.40 2021
102 Macao SAR, China 5.26 2021
103 Singapore 5.25 2021
103 Botswana 5.25 2021
105 Bahrain 5.16 2015
106 Côte d'Ivoire 5.14 2017
106 Senegal 5.14 2017
106 Niger 5.14 2017
106 Togo 5.14 2017
106 Mali 5.14 2017
106 Guinea-Bissau 5.14 2017
112 Australia 5.10 2019
113 Hong Kong SAR, China 5.00 2021
114 Mexico 4.89 2021
115 North Macedonia 4.86 2021
116 Serbia 4.76 2010
117 Malta 4.71 2013
118 China 4.35 2021
119 The Bahamas 4.25 2021
120 Chile 4.18 2018
121 Bulgaria 4.12 2021
122 Qatar 3.85 2021
123 Kuwait 3.73 2021
124 Sweden 3.68 2006
125 Malaysia 3.44 2021
126 Israel 3.40 2020
127 United States 3.25 2021
128 Czech Republic 3.20 2021
129 Bosnia and Herzegovina 3.20 2021
130 Thailand 3.06 2021
131 Hungary 2.97 2021
132 Korea 2.89 2021
133 Canada 2.70 2017
134 Switzerland 2.64 2021
135 Norway 2.27 2021
136 Vanuatu 2.08 2020
137 Italy 2.03 2021
138 San Marino 1.72 2020
139 Netherlands 1.50 2013
140 Japan 0.99 2017
141 United Kingdom 0.50 2014
142 New Zealand 0.00 2018

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: Both banking and financial systems enhance growth, the main factor in poverty reduction. At low levels of economic development commercial banks tend to dominate the financial system, while at higher levels domestic stock markets tend to become more active and efficient. The size and mobility of international capital flows make it increasingly important to monitor the strength of financial systems. Robust financial systems can increase economic activity and welfare, but instability can disrupt financial activity and impose widespread costs on the economy.

Limitations and Exceptions: Countries use a variety of reporting formats, sample designs, interest compounding formulas, averaging methods, and data presentations for indices and other data series on interest rates. The IMF's Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual does not provide guidelines beyond the general recommendation that such data should reflect market prices and effective (rather than nominal) interest rates and should be representative of the financial assets and markets to be covered. For more information, please see http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/index.htm.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Many interest rates coexist in an economy, reflecting competitive conditions, the terms governing loans and deposits, and differences in the position and status of creditors and debtors. In some economies interest rates are set by regulation or administrative fiat. In economies with imperfect markets, or where reported nominal rates are not indicative of effective rates, it may be difficult to obtain data on interest rates that reflect actual market transactions. Deposit and lending rates are collected by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as representative interest rates offered by banks to resident customers. The terms and conditions attached to these rates differ by country, however, limiting their comparability. In 2009 the IMF began publishing a new presentation of monetary statistics for countries that report data in accordance with its Monetary Financial Statistical Manual 2000. The presentation for countries that report data in accordance with its International Financial Statistics (IFS) remains the same.

Periodicity: Annual