The effectiveness of monetary policy depends on the adjustment response of Central Banks short-term interest
rate on the real interest rates charged by commercial banks and ultimately on macroeconomic indicators of
investment and consumption in the economy. Thus, the extent of interest rate pass-through largely depends on
how effective the process of financial intermediation works and to what extent individual bank characteristics
influence or hinder a perfect adjustment of product rates based on market conditions. The study examines the
speed and completeness of pass-through from policy rates to retail bank rates and the effectiveness of monetary
policy stance in influencing macroeconomic policy targets using a co-integration analysis based on Johansen and
Juselius maximum likelihood and Engle-Granger two step procedures for the period 1970–2011. The VAR based
Error Correction Model (ECM) and the Mean Adjustment Lag (MAL) was used to determine the short run
estimates and asymmetric behaviour respectively. The study found an evidence of downward stickiness both in
the short-run and long-run policy pass-through to the retail bank rates. In order to ensure robustness of the result,
the Impulse Response Function (IRF) and Variance Decomposition (VD) analysis were conducted and similar
slow and sluggish pass-through was obtained. The study as well, found pass-through from policy rate to
macroeconomic variables to exhibit extremely rigid immediate responses