Inflation in Morocco: Dirham & gradual float

The Direct Answer: The Moroccan Dirham lost ~15.8% of its purchasing power between 2020–2025 due to cumulative inflation (IMF & central bank data). Every 100 MAD saved in 2020 buys today what only 84.2 MAD could buy back then. 2022 was the worst year with 6.7% inflation.

−15.8%
Purchasing Power Loss 2020–2025
3.0%
Average Annual Inflation
24 years
To Lose Half Purchasing Power
🔗 Currency basket (EUR 60% + USD 40%) with flexible band
Exchange Rate System

The Moroccan Dirham is managed with a flexible peg to a basket dominated by EUR (60%) due to trade ties with Europe—so it moves smoothly without dramatic swings. The 2022–2023 surge (inflation above 6%) was imported from Europe's energy crisis then eased; Morocco is gradually moving toward wider floatation in coordination with the IMF.

Annual inflation in Morocco (2020–2025)

YearInflation Rate
20200.65%
20211.40%
20226.65%
20236.10%
20241.00%
20251.80%

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Frequently asked questions about the Moroccan Dirham

How much purchasing power has the Moroccan Dirham lost?

Between 2020–2025 the Moroccan Dirham lost ~15.8% of its purchasing power from cumulative inflation. At an average 3.0% annual inflation, an uninvested saver loses half their purchasing power roughly every 24 years.

Is the Moroccan Dirham pegged to the US Dollar?

Yes—a currency basket (EUR 60% + USD 40%) with a flexible band. But beware: pegging stabilizes the exchange rate but won't protect you from domestic inflation that quietly erodes purchasing power.

Is Moroccan Dirham floatation risky for savings?

Morocco's path is intentionally gradual: widening the fluctuation band in phases since 2018 instead of one floatation shock. To date, the Dirham hasn't lost major value—but Egypt's lesson says: always monitor the gap between official and informal exchange rates.

How do I protect my savings from Moroccan Dirham inflation?

Golden rule: don't hold long-term savings in an inflationary currency. Diversify between hard assets (gold historically preserves purchasing power), hard currencies, and income-generating assets. Use Modakharaty's gold calculator and inflation calculator to measure your position in real numbers before any decision.

Sources: IMF WEO, Central Bank bulletins. The same data used in Historical Inflation Calculator. Not investment advice.