Business World

BSP has room for more RRR cuts

- L.M.J.C. Jocson

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) has room to cut lenders’ reserve requiremen­t ratios (RRR) further, but is looking to further study the impact of lower levels on financial intermedia­tion, its top official said.

“We’ve lowered our reserve requiremen­ts quite a bit. I think there’s room to lower them some more, but we have to time it right. But we need good research on exactly what the impact of reserve requiremen­ts are on financial intermedia­tion,” Mr. Remolona said at a press briefing on Wednesday.

The BSP chief earlier said they were looking to further reduce banks’ RRR “when the time is right,” possibly as early as this year.

The RRR is the percentage of bank deposits and deposit substitute liabilitie­s that banks cannot lend out and must set aside in deposits with the BSP.

In June last year, the BSP slashed the RRR for big banks and nonbank financial institutio­ns with quasi-banking functions by 250 basis points to 9.5%. The central bank has brought down the RRR for universal and commercial banks to a single-digit level from a high of 20% in 2018.

“We traditiona­lly looked at reserve requiremen­ts as a way to control money supply and that was the thinking in the 1960s, I think,” Mr. Remolona said.

“That thinking has gone away. Now, reserve requiremen­ts are seen as a distortion of financial intermedia­tion. They drive a wedge between deposit rates and lending rates,” he added.

The BSP chief said intermedia­tion is “burdened” by regulation­s, including reserve requiremen­ts.

“There is a gray market where conglomera­tes lend to each other — no big contracts — and so we want to bring that activity back into the formal banking system. But that needs more research. I’ve told you that I want to deepen the capital markets. We need research on that,” Mr. Remolona said.

RICE INFLATION

Meanwhile, the BSP chief also highlighte­d the need to monitor rice inflation.

“In our research, rice prices are what we call salient prices. They have a disproport­ionate impact on expectatio­ns beyond their weight in the consumer price index,” he said. “Because of that, we have to monitor mainly rice prices… There are other commoditie­s affected by

El Niño, but rice prices are so dependent on water. We have to monitor their effect on expectatio­ns.”

“We’re not going to do monetary policy on rice prices directly, but the second-round effects will affect our monetary policy,” Mr. Remolona added.

Headline inflation accelerate­d for the first time in five months to 3.4% in February amid elevated food prices, the government earlier reported.

Rice inflation, which accounts for almost half of the headline print, surged to 23.7% in February, or the fastest since the same month in 2009.

The BSP earlier said headline inflation could accelerate above their 2-4% target anew in the second quarter due to the El Niño phenomenon’s impact on agricultur­al production. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines