The Pak Banker

MPS: Need more hawks

- KARACHI

SBP increased the policy rate by 1 percent to 17 percent seeing entrenched inflation expectatio­ns and sharp and steep growth in core inflation.

The decision is in line with the street's expectatio­ns. However, seeing the urgency in going to the IMF, some were thinking that SBP may be hawkish to counter the currency depreciati­on pressure emanating from the open market. That is not the case. Perhaps, SBP is not an active part of the ongoing round of negotiatio­n with the IMF.

Having said that, there are no reasons to call a stop to the increase in interest rates. There is going to be at least one more round of tightening, if not more. Going back to the IMF is a must in the baseline scenario. There would be additional pressure on inflation due to energy prices adjustment and by making currency market-based.

And perhaps, SBP is waiting for the government to adjust on the fiscal and energy side in line with the IMF's expectatio­ns, before leaving the currency market-based. By taking other measures, hedgers, and hoarders will get a strong signal on getting back to the IMF and that may result in the selling of dollars in the open market, and in that way, the depreciati­on in the interbank market may be tapered.

The inherent assumption in the monetary policy decision is that the government is going back to the IMF. If that does not happen, it would be an entirely different world for the monetary policy members, and future actions could be very different.

SBP is convenient­ly shifting the complete onus of IMF program resumption to the ministry of finance. Yes, energy and fiscal are the government's issues. But, SBP is independen­t and powerful (on paper) and interest rates and exchange rates are totally in its preview.

Yet, its signaling is tamed seeing the growing gap in the interbank and open market of the exchange rate. If the central bank thinks that the open market rate is not the real value, it could have raised rates higher to attract foreign currency buyers to convert to PKR. It could have averted the growing hoarding of commoditie­s.

Well, there might be some wisdom in these half-measures. But timings demand strong signaling. And these are important to ease the inflation expectatio­ns pressure. Both consumers and producers are expecting higher inflation. Although the headline growth (month-on-month) is easing, the core pressure maintains.

The food inflation is keeping high. Here one of the problems is the lack of administra­tive controls and ill-timed decisions. Historical­ly, numerous food commoditie­s supplies and retail prices are controlled by provincial government­s.

Although it is not a good practice, poor decision-making in the past few months by provincial government­s and their lack of coordinati­on with the federal have worsened the food prices crisis. In a way, folks in SBP think that controllin­g food inflation and currency in the open market is the government's job.

The core of the problem is fiscal. Without it, any policy action of SBP would have limited efficacy. The monetary policy noted that there are slippages in the fiscal year-to-date and the gaps are expected to grow in the remaining fiscal. The question is why SBP is not more hawkish to compensate for fiscal slackness. Perhaps, the hope is that the US treasury may influence IMF on relaxing fiscal targets this year.

Yet, energy prices are to be increased and the currency must move. And to cater to the growth in inflation, SBP may increase the policy rate going forward. Broad thinking at SBP is right, but boldness is missing, as SBP is clearly behind the curve.

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