Sun Star Bacolod

BSP eyes November inflation at 7.4% to 8.2%

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MANILA – Higher prices of electricit­y, liquified petroleum gas (LPG), and some agricultur­al items, with the latter due to the impact of Severe Tropical Storm Paeng, are seen to push the domestic inflation rate to a range of between 7.4 percent and 8.2 percent for November 2022.

In a statement Tuesday night, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said these factors are seen to be countered by the decline in petroleum prices along with the prices of pork and the appreciati­on of the Philippine peso against the US dollar.

“More importantl­y, inflation is projected to gradually decelerate in the succeeding months as the cost-push shocks to inflation due to weather disturbanc­es and transport fare adjustment­s dissipate,” it said.

The statement also noted that the “timely implementa­tion of non-monetary measures will also help temper price pressures in the months ahead.”

“The BSP continues to monitor closely EMERG ing price developmen­ts to enable timely interventi­on that could help prevent the further broadening of price pressures, in accordance with the BSP’S price stability mandate,” it added.

The rate of price increases accelerate­d further to 7.7 percent in October, the highest since December 2008, due to upticks in the food and non-alcoholic beverage index, among others.

BSP Governor Felipe Medalla told journalist­s Tuesday night that signs are pointing to a possible decelerati­on of the domestic inflation rate, with the peak to be either in December 2022 or January 2023.

He said supply shocks, such as the prices of electricit­y and adjustment in the public utility fare, drive the current rate of price increases.

He said wage hikes are also possible, noting that although this is normally done once a year, authoritie­s may approve a second hike by citing supervenin­g events.

“These are the things that we’ve been watching all along, that the supply shock will bring about responses,” he said.

Medalla said these are the factors that may drive inflation in the coming months despite the appreciati­on of the peso against the US dollar and the drop in oil prices.

“But what we are confident of is that we will be on a target-consistent path. And the moment you see it going down, it will continue to go down,” he said.

He, however, pointed out that “it’s a question of when (the inflation will start to go down).”

“The highest year-onyear headline inflation is either this coming report or next month. We’re still confident that by middle of next year, July or August, inflation will be closer to 3 (percent) than to 4 (percent),” he added.

The government’s inflation target is between 2 percent and 4 percent.

As of October, the average inflation rate stood at 5.4 percent.

 ?? BSP PHOTO ?? BANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Felipe Medalla
BSP PHOTO BANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Felipe Medalla

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