BusinessMirror

Low inflation reflects stability

- Manny B. Villar

The inflation rate moderated to 0.8 percent in October 2019, the slowest in three-and-a-half years, reflecting the Duterte administra­tion’s strong political will to stabilize the economy and make it more conducive to both investors and consumers.

The inflation in October, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority, softened from 0.9 percent in September and 6.7 percent in October 2018. It was also the slowest since April 2016 when inflation settled at 0.7 percent.

With the latest number, inflation rate in the first 10 months averaged 2.6 percent, or within the government’s 2019 target range of 2 percent to 4 percent.

Inflation rate fell below 1 percent for two consecutiv­e months starting September mainly because of the high-base effect and the decline in the actual price of rice following the extraordin­ary surge last year caused by an artificial supply shortage.

The government showed it is in control of the situation by implementi­ng the rice tarifficat­ion regime, which effectivel­y abolished

the monopoly on rice imports by the National Food Authority.

As a result, we registered a 0.9-percent deflation or negative growth in prices of food and nonalcohol­ic beverages in October, a sharp reversal from the 9.4-percent food inflation recorded in the same month last year. For the poor Filipinos, food inflation is the most important number in the consumer price index.

The transporta­tion segment of the CPI also registered a deflation (-1.7 percent) in October because of subdued petroleum prices. The food and transport components represent 46 percent of the CPI basket and directly affect the low-income groups.

Data show that following the rice tarifficat­ion, the price of rice declined for the sixth consecutiv­e month. In October, the price of the staple was 9.7 percent lower year-onyear, according to the PSA.

I believe that inf lation most likely bottomed out in October, as prices were normally expected to pick up a bit in November and December because of holiday spending.

Still, a radical increase in prices of basic commoditie­s is not expected, except for pork products amid the African swine fever, or ASF, scare that affected the hog industry in Rizal, Pangasinan, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Pampanga, Cavite and Quezon City.

Overall, I believe the domestic economic environmen­t has become more conducive in the fourth quarter because of the low inflation rate, with the strong peso and the resurgent stock market.

The peso appreciate­d by around 4 percent this year to trade at 50.50 against the US dollar, making it one of the best-performing Asian currencies, while the Philippine Stock Exchange index recently breached the 8,000-point mark.

Given the downtrend in inflation rate, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has more f lexibility to further adjust the interest rates so that companies and households will have more spending capability. I know that some companies are just waiting for interest rates to return to the recordlow level of 3 percent before embarking on their next wave of expansion.

The overnight borrowing rate stands at 4 percent after the Bangko

Sentral reduced it by a total of 75 basis points this year from a high of 4.75 percent in 2018. The Monetary Board, in the face of riceinduce­d inflation, moved last year to increase the benchmark rate by a total of 175 basis points from a low of 3 percent in 2017.

With the threat of the rice-price surge becoming a thing of the past, I believe it is time for the BSP to be more supportive of economic growth, resume monetary easing and bring back the rate to 3 percent to help companies and households avail themselves of financing, which is the lifeblood of the economy.

Both the BSP and the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority expect inflation to remain within the target range of 2 percent to 4 percent from 2019 to 2021 given the current macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls.

BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno has in fact clearly conveyed to the market his preference to support economic growth by releasing more liquidity. Apart from slashing the key interest rates, he led the Monetary Board in reducing the reserve requiremen­t ratio of banks by a total of 400 basis points this year to 14 percent in line with his goal to reduce the RRR to a single-digit level by the end of his term in 2023. This unleashed around P400 billion to the market, but banks mainly used them

See “Villar,” A11

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