Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH KEY RATES UNCHANGED

- —BENO. DE VERA

Monetary authoritie­s during the last policy meeting for the year kept key rates steady while also maintainin­g the 2-4 percent inflation target for the next four years.

Despite external uncertaint­ies, the Monetary Board during its meeting Thursday deemed “domestic demand conditions are likely to stay firm, supported by solid private household spending, higher government expenditur­e, and adequate domestic liquidity” in the near term, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. told reporters. The Mon- etary Board is the BSP’s highest policy setting body.

Tetangco said the Monetary Board has also considered the US Federal Reserve’s move last week to hike rates, including the possibilit­y of three more upward movements next year.

“The Monetary Board also noted that maintainin­g monetary policy settings at this juncture will give the BSP more time to assess evolving economic developmen­ts and calibrate its policy tools as appropriat­e,” Tetangco said.

As such, the BSP maintained the overnight reverse repurchase facili-

ty at 3 percent. It also kept the interest rates on overnight lending and deposit facilities as well as the reserve requiremen­t ratios unchanged.

Tetangco said inflation would likely average below the 2-4 percent target range this year. Headline inflation averaged 1.7 percent from January to November.

BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said the BSP continues to expect inflation settling at 1.8 percent by yearend.

But for 2017 and 2018, Guinigundo said the BSP’s inflation forecasts were raised to 3.3 percent and 3 percent, respective­ly, from 3 percent and 2.9 percent previously.

Guinigundo said rising oil prices, the impact of the sustained strong domestic economy, as well as the depreciati­on of the peso by about 5 percent year-to-date were expected to bring about faster inflation in the next two years.

As for 2019-2020, Guinigundo said they expect “inflationa­ry trends to continue because the economy has become competitiv­e” alongside expectatio­ns that oil prices would normalize as supply continues to outstrip demand.

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