By CentralBankNews.info
Pakistan’s central bank kept its new policy rate steady at 6.50 percent, as expected, saying the lagged effects of the recent monetary expansion and benign inflation expectations would result in a favorable outlook for inflation.
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), which cut its policy rate by a total of 300 basis points in its 2015 fiscal year that ended June 30, expects headline inflation to pick up modestly in the second half of the current fiscal year due to the comparison with low rates and firmer crude oil prices.
However, there are also upside risks to inflation from any upward adjustment in electricity and gas tariffs, a low level of food prices may have an adverse impact on next year’s food production, aggregate demand may pick up due to the low interest rates, remittances and overall production may be higher than projected, the central bank added.
“However, there is no major change in SBP’s previous inflation forecast,” the bank said.
Pakistan’s headline inflation rate averaged 4.5 percent in fiscal 2015, down from 8.6 percent in fiscal 2014, with consumer price inflation rate in June rising marginally to 3.2 percent from 3.16 percent in May.
The SBP projects headline inflation of 4.5 to 5.5 percent in fiscal 2016, which began on July 1, below its 8.0 percent target.
In its May statement the SBP introduced a revised interest rate corridor that was aimed at strengthening the transmission of monetary policy. Under the previous regime from 2009, there was no instrument to limit very frequent drops in the repo rate and the money market repo rate also at times exceeded the reverse repo rate, which at that point was the policy rate.
The idea behind the new rate structure was to align the central bank’s operational target with a policy rate that was set within the corridor. The SBP Target Rate, or the new policy rate, was set 50 basis points below the ceiling of the corridor, which was cut by 100 basis points in May, while the corridor was narrowed by 50 basis points to 200 points.
The State Bank of Pakistan issued the following executive summary in its July policy statement:
10. The deceleration in broad money (M2) growth from 15.9 percent in FY13 to 12.5 percent in FY14 has slightly reversed in FY15 to 13.2 percent. While Net Domestic Assets (NDA) led the growth in M2, Net Foreign Assets (NFA) decelerated in FY15. Despite better current account balance, deceleration in NFA of the banking system was a result of lower capital and financial inflows. Government reliance on banking system, specifically on scheduled banks, for its financing needs boosted the NDA of the banking system. Scheduled banks’ financing of both commodity operations and PSEs also witnessed higher flow in FY15 against FY14.
14. Given the above macroeconomic considerations, SBP Board of Directors has decided to keep the SBP Policy Rate unchanged at 6.5 percent. “
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