By CentralBankNews.info
Pakistan’s central bank cut its new policy rate by 50 basis points to 6.00 percent, citing decelerating inflation and an unchanged forecast for inflation to average 4.5 to 5.5 percent in fiscal 2016, below the bank’s annual target of 6.0 percent.
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), which has now cut its key rate by 300 basis points this year, added that it expects economic activity to rise in fiscal 2016, which began on July 1, and this should result in an uptake of credit.
“With better law and order situation, investor and consumer confidence is improving,” the SBP said, noting further improvement in large-scale manufacturing due to better energy supply and a better investment environment from the implementation of infrastructure projects under the China Pakistan Economic Corridor.
Pakistan’s headline inflation rate decelerated to 1.72 percent in August from 1.8 percent in July with the 12-month moving average CPI inflation rate down to 3.6 percent in August from 8.4 percent in August last year.
“The current deceleration owes much to the smooth supply of the perishable food items and falling international oil pass-through to consumer prices,” the state bank said.
A continuation of the current trend along with a moderate pick up in demand will largely determine the path of inflation this fiscal year with recent rises in natural and compressed natural gas prices offset by lower global prices of oil “that has yet to find the bottom,” the SBP said.
The SBP made no reference to the exchange rate of the Pakistani rupee, which fell in late August and was trading at 104.45 to the U.S. dollar on Friday, down from around 101.8 in mid-August and 3.5 percent below its level at the start of this year.
Press reports last month said the SBP had expressed its concern over the falling rupee with traders saying there was a rise in dollar demand from Hajj pilgrims who had started buying dollars and Saudi Riyal for their journey as flights started on Aug. 17.
The State Bank of Pakistan issued the following statement:
” Year-on-year headline CPI inflation decelerated to 1.7 percent in August 2015 from 7.0 percent in August 2014. Following its declining trend of the past several months, the 12-month moving average CPI inflation came down to 3.6 percent in August 2015 from 8.4 percent in August 2014. Other indicators, such as core inflation measures, have also decreased in August 2015. Major sources of declining inflation are favorable supply shocks and demand management policies. The current deceleration owes much to the smooth supply of the perishable food items and falling international oil price pass-through to consumer prices.
Continuation of current trends along with moderate pick up in aggregate demand would largely determine the path of inflation in FY16. Recent increases in natural and compressed natural gas prices and their likely second round impacts would be offset by lower global oil price that has yet to find the bottom. Thus, there is no change in SBP’s forecast of average CPI inflation for FY16 with its range of 4.5-5.5 percent remaining below the annual plan target of 6 percent.
Given the above macroeconomic conditions, the central board of Directors of SBP has decided to reduce the SBP policy rate by 50bps from 6.5 percent to 6.0 percent.”
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