Philippine Daily Inquirer

BSP VOWS ‘STRONG’ RESPONSE TO RECORD-HIGH INFLATION

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

The central bank yesterday vowed to take more aggressive action to rein in the country’s record high inflation rate, saying evidence was now emerging that more forceful policies were needed to keep the peso’s volatility from fueling further price increases.

In a briefing, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said the policy making Monetary Board “is considerin­g strong follow-through monetary adjustment” when it convenes to decide on the interest rate policy on Aug. 9.

“We are taking into account the potential price pressures of excessive volatility in the foreign exchange market,” the central bank chief said. “While we believe that our fundamenta­ls remain solid and healthy, sustained pressures on the peso could adversely affect inflation expectatio­ns.”

In justifying its decision to hold off on raising its key policy rates—de-

spite clamor from financial markets that had been steadily rising since late 2017— the central bank stood pat on its statements that the current price hikes were being fueled by “supply side” factors that were beyond the ability of monetary policy to control.

This time, however, Espenil- la conceded that “some demand side pressure may also be already feeding into inflation.”

“All of these warrant a firm and timely monetary response,” he said. That will be on top of the two consecutiv­e 25-basis point hikes the Monetary Board had mandated in its last two meetings since May.

Espenilla said the pace and magnitude of policy tightening would depend on the central bank’s “comprehens­ive and rigorous assessment of all relevant data and forecasts.”

The inflation rate currently stands at 5.2 percent as of June —the highest in at least five years under the 2012 price base, but potentiall­y the highest in nine years under the old mea- suring scheme.

Economists from the government and the private sector expect the consumer price index to rise further in coming months, possibly peaking by October before normalizin­g in early 2019.

Espenilla noted that the Philippine economy was strong enough to withstand any mone- tary policy tightening whose impact on growth, he said, would likely be limited.

“The BSP likewise reiterates its support for carefully coordinate­d efforts with other government agencies in implementi­ng nonmonetar­y measures to help mitigate the impact of supplyside factors on inflation and social welfare,” he said.

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