Khaleej Times

Philippine­s mulls ‘strong action’ on price pressures

-

manila — The Philippine central bank is considerin­g “strong monetary action” at its meeting next month to tame inflation and foreign exchange volatility, its governor said on Friday, signalling a third interest rate rise this year.

Inflation rose to 5.2 per cent in July, the highest level in more than five years and above the central bank’s two to four per cent target rate. Its expected to quicken in July to 5.3 per cent due to higher food, fuel and utility costs, Department of Finance chief economist Gil Beltran said.

At the same time, the peso is hovering near a 12-year low against the dollar and is one of the worstperfo­rming currencies in Asia.

“The Monetary Board is considerin­g strong monetary action to deal with persistent elevated inflation risks as well as our concern on the volatility in the foreign exchange market”, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas governor Nestor Espenilla told a media briefing.

The central bank’s next scheduled meeting is on August 9, the same day that the government is due to release second-quarter GDP figures and two days after July inflation data is scheduled for publicatio­n. Espenilla said the peso’s weakness is contributi­ng to higher inflation expectatio­ns and “developmen­ts that may disanchor those expectatio­ns warrant a strong response.” The currency has weakened in recent years as US interest rates started to rise and more recently as global trade tensions mounted.

The BSP raised interest rates last month for the second time in six weeks, becoming the second central bank regionally after Indonesia’s to deliver two increases in a short period of time. Like other Asian economies with external deficits, the Philippine­s faces pressure to follow the US Federal Reserve in shifting away from low interest rate settings or risk capital flight as investors seek higher-yielding assets. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Philippine inflation rose to 5.2 per cent in July, the highest in over five years. —
Reuters Philippine inflation rose to 5.2 per cent in July, the highest in over five years. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates