Taranaki Daily News

Dovish Reserve Bank cautious on outlook

- Tom Pullar-Strecker

The Reserve Bank has confirmed the official cash rate is staying on hold at 0.25 per cent.

The central bank said it would also keep its $100 billion quantitati­ve easing programme and $28b Funding for Lending scheme in place unchanged, saying it saw ‘‘a prolonged monetary stimulus’’ as necessary.

The bank said the start of Covid vaccinatio­n programmes around the world was positive for future health and economic activity. But it cautioned that the economic outlook remained ‘‘highly uncertain’’, suggesting some of the factors that have helped support employment and inflation at higher levels than expected were temporary.

In a dovish statement, it said it would maintain its current stimulator­y monetary settings until it was confident consumer price inflation would be sustained at its 2 per cent midpoint target and that employment was ‘‘at or above its maximum sustainabl­e level’’.

Meeting these requiremen­ts would necessitat­e ‘‘considerab­le time and patience’’, it said. The Reserve Bank issued its monetary policy statement in the wake of Standard and Poor’s upgrading the country’s credit ratings and a growing sense of stability surroundin­g economic confidence.

Westpac is not ruling out the economy slipping back into a mild recession and other economists are unsure unemployme­nt has peaked amid ongoing uncertaint­y over the likelihood of further lockdowns.

But ASB joined BNZ this week in forecastin­g the next move in the official cash rate could be a rate hike next year, with a once-assumed drop to a negative cash rate now looking fanciful.

The Reserve Bank said banks had

now carried out the systems changes needed to allow for negative rates, if that came about, and it remained ‘‘prepared to provide additional monetary stimulus if necessary’’. The bank noted ‘‘the lift in domestic economic activity, as evident across a range of indicators including inflation, employment, household spending, gross domestic product, and asset prices’’. But in what may be its most significan­t comments, it suggested some of that might be short term.

Its statement said ‘‘several of the factors supporting economic activity are likely to prove temporary’’.

‘‘Fiscal policy will continue to support the economy but its impulse is unlikely to be as strong as last year,’’ it said. ‘‘In addition, economic uncertaint­y persists due to the sustained closure of internatio­nal borders and the manifestat­ion of new strains of the virus. These factors continue to weigh on business confidence and investment intentions.’’

It said several members of its monetary policy committee noted a projected increase in headline inflation could also in part be explained by ‘‘one-off factors’’, particular­ly oil price increases. It noted house price inflation had been ‘‘higher than assumed’’.

But it attributed that mainly to ‘‘a more resilient labour market and the arrival of more permanent migrants prior to the border closure’’.

People who arrived in New Zealand during the early stages of the pandemic and subsequent­ly stayed on, were contributi­ng to both housing and broader demand pressures, it said.

The New Zealand dollar edged a fraction higher in the immediate wake of the announceme­nt, trading up about 0.12 US cents.

ASB chief economist Nick Tuffley said one of the key messages from the Reserve Bank was that the environmen­t remained highly uncertain.

 ?? ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF ?? The Reserve Bank has risked being recast from a ‘‘Covid hero’’ into a house price villain as doubts have grown that its monetary stimulus measures have all been necessary.
ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF The Reserve Bank has risked being recast from a ‘‘Covid hero’’ into a house price villain as doubts have grown that its monetary stimulus measures have all been necessary.
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