Philippine Daily Inquirer

ADDRESS SUPPLY CONSTRAINT­S THAT STOKE INFLATION, GOV’T URGED

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The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas ( BSP) has done its part with its aggressive interest rate hikes, but to address the surge in local consumer prices, nonmonetar­y measures to address supply constraint­s are urgently needed, especially in the aftermath of Typhoon “Ompong.”

This is according to British banking giant HSBC, which said interest rate hikes alone were insufficie­nt to fully curb inflation and inflation expectatio­ns.

The research was issued on Sept. 27 as soon as the BSP delivered a fresh 50-basis point increase in key interest rates, bringing the total interest rate increase this year to 150 basis points.

“We expect another 25- basis point hike in first quarter of 2019 and inflation to remain above- target in 2019 unless key reforms to curb prices are passed,” the bank said.

HSBC said Philippine inflationa­ry pressures were still largely driven by the supply side, as seen by a widening gap between headline and core prices.

It noted that food, tobacco, and transport costs alone contribute­d 4.4-percentage points to the 6.4-percent inflation print in August.

Beyond monetary policy, HSBC believes these measures would be more “constructi­ve” and have a bigger impact on taming inflation in the near term than solely monetary policy:

• Passage of rice tarifficat­ion bill, which will pave the way for the replacemen­t of the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on rice imports with tariff, removing unnecessar­y government interventi­on in the rice market.

•Allowing fish imports to be distribute­d in the wet markets across the country.

•Releasing 4.6 million sacks of rice available in warehouses of the National Food Authority (NFA) to markets across the country.

• Importing five million sacks of rice, which will arrive over the next one-and-a-half months, and another five million sacks early next year.;

• The Department of Agricultur­e and the Department of Trade and Industry to convene poultry producers and set up public markets where producers can sell this directly to con- sumers.

• The Sugar Regulatory Administra­tion’s opening of importatio­n of sugar to direct users to moderate cost to consumers.

• Issuance by the government of a directive to simplify licensing process for rice imports.

• Forming of a monitoring team for delivery of rice ports to National Food Authority warehouses and retail outlets.

• The Bureau of Customs to prioritize release of essential food items in ports.

“Timely implementa­tion of these reforms is thus necessary to curb inflation and ensure that inflation comes down to within target by 2019, as the BSP pledged to secure,” HSBC said.

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