The Philippine Star

BSP on guard vs inflation risks amid El Niño

- By KEISHA TA-ASAN

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is closely watching the impact of El Niño on inflation, particular­ly on second round effects, as inflation likely picked up for the second straight month in March.

BSP Governor Eli Remolona Jr. said the drought caused by the El Niño weather event could impact rice prices, as these salient prices tend to stand out among households and affect their inflation expectatio­ns.

“Because of that, we have to monitor rice prices – mainly rice prices (but) there are other commoditie­s affected by El Niño,” he said. “Because rice is so dependent on water, we have to monitor their effect on expectatio­ns.”

The amount of damage to agricultur­e in eight regions has reached P1.75 billion as the El Niño phenomenon intensifie­s, an official from the Department of Agricultur­e said.

The damage covered 32,231 hectares of farmlands, with at least 29,437 farmers displaced.

The BSP chief said headline inflation likely further accelerate­d to 3.9 percent in March from 3.4 percent in February due to base effects, but lower than the 7.6 percent in March 2023.

If realized, inflation would be near the upper end of the two to four percent target range of the BSP.

To tame inflation, the Monetary Board tightened borrowing costs by 450 basis points from May 2022 to October 2023. This brought the key rate to a near 17-year high of 6.50 percent.

Dennis Lapid, officer-incharge of the BSP’s Department of Economic Research, said supply-side shocks from the weather disturbanc­e could be a major influence on prices.

“So that also highlights the importance of non-monetary measures in terms of dealing with these shocks,” Lapid said. “It also means that the central bank has to be on guard.”

Based on data from the Philippine Statistics Authority, rice posted a higher inflation rate of 23.7 percent in February, the highest since the 24.6 percent recorded in February 2009, from 22.6 percent in January.

Remolona told reporters that supply-side issues are best addressed with non-monetary measures, which is led by Finance Secretary Ralph Recto.

“The Secretary of Finance is one member of a sevenmembe­r monetary board,” he said. “Thankfully, we have an independen­t central bank, and the independen­ce is mainly between fiscal policy and monetary policy.”

“We have to coordinate. But we’re not going to be driven by fiscal policy concerns, and that’s been working, I think,” Remolona said.

Meanwhile, the BSP chief noted that it will conduct more research on measuring the degree to which inflation expectatio­ns and second-round effects are anchored as well as the implicatio­ns if these start to get de-anchored.

“Once expectatio­ns become de-anchored, our life becomes much more difficult. We have to be much more hawkish than before once expectatio­ns become de-anchored. So, we have to be able to measure the tendency for that,” he said.

He added that the central bank is looking to study the impact of lowering the reserve requiremen­t ratio (RRR) further, as banks’ reserve requiremen­ts could be seen as a “distortion of financial intermedia­tion.”

“They drive a wedge between deposit rates and lending rates. 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,” Remolona said.

Last June 2023, the BSP delivered a major reduction in the level of deposit banks are required to keep with the central bank to single-digit levels.

The regulator has slashed the RRR for universal and commercial banks, as well as nonbank financial institutio­ns with quasi-banking functions, by 250 basis points to 9.5 percent.

Likewise, the RRR for digital banks was cut by 200 basis points to six percent, while the RRR for thrift banks was lowered by 100 basis points to two percent.

The RRR of small banks or rural and cooperativ­e banks went down by 100 basis points to one percent.

The BSP chief said headline inflation likely further accelerate­d to 3.9 percent in March from 3.4 percent in February due to base effects, but lower than the 7.6 percent in March 2023.

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