Iceland raises rate 25 bps to curb inflationary pressures

November 4, 2015

By CentralBankNews.info
     Iceland’s central bank raised its main interest rates, including the seven-day deposit rate, by 25 basis points to curb inflation that is expected to exceed the bank’s target next year and not return to the target until 2018.
     The Central Bank of Iceland (CBI), which has now raised its rate by 125 basis points this year, said a stronger exchange rate of the krona and low global prices had provided the the scope to raise rates more slowly than envisioned but still not changed the need for a tighter monetary policy stance due to growing domestic inflationary pressures from large pay increases.
    The rate rise follows the central bank’s warning in September that it would raise rates further if inflation accelerates. In September the central bank maintained its rates but raised the reserve requirements by 200 basis points.
    “How much and how quickly the monetary stance must be tightened will depend on future developments and how the current economic uncertainty plays out,” the CBI said, noting “considerable uncertainty” about the transmission of monetary policy as the impact of unusually low global interest rates have been felt increasingly in Iceland.
    Future rates will also depend on liquidity in connection with the liberalization of Iceland’s capital account and whether other instruments are used to contain demand-side pressures.
    Iceland’s inflation rate eased to a less-than-expected 1.8 percent in October from 1.9 percent in September due to the continued fall in global oil and commodity prices and the recent rise in the krona that has helped offset domestic inflationary pressures.
    “As a result, the short-term inflation outlook is considerably better than the Bank projected in August, although the longer-term outlook is broadly unchanged,” the CBI said.
    The CBI, which targets inflation of 2.5 percent, forecast 2015 inflation of 2.2 percent in August and 2016 inflation of 4.3 percent.
    The Icelandic krona depreciated from May 2014 through March this year but since then it has appreciated and was trading at 129 to the U.S. dollar today for a net depreciation since the beginning of this year of 1.26 percent.
    The CBI raised the seven-day deposit rate to 5.75 percent, the overnight CBI rates to 7.50 percent and the seven-day collateralized lending rate to 6.50 percent.
    Last month Iceland repaid $332 million, or all its remaining obligations, to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), ending the rescue package that was launched in 2008 during the global financial crises.

    The Central Bank of Iceland issued the following statement:

“The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Iceland has decided to raise the Bank’s interest rates by 0.25 percentage points. The Bank’s key interest rate – the rate on seven-day term deposits – will therefore be 5.75%.
GDP is projected to grow at 4.6% this year, about ½ a percentage point more than the Bank forecast in August, and the medium-term GDP growth outlook has improved as well. GDP growth is driven mainly by domestic demand, which is projected to increase by more than 7% this year.
Inflation has been somewhat lower recently than was forecast in August and is still below the target, especially if the housing component of the CPI is excluded. This is due mainly to a continued decline in global oil and commodity prices and the appreciation of the króna, which has offset increased domestic inflationary pressures.
As a result, the short-term inflation outlook is considerably better than the Bank projected in August, although the longer-term outlook is broadly unchanged. It is still expected that large pay increases will cause inflation to rise above the target as 2016 progresses and the effects of low global inflation taper off. Inflation will not return to target until 2018. The forecast is based on the assumption that the monetary stance will be tightened as the positive output gap widens and inflation rises. It also takes account of the fact that the fiscal budget proposal for 2016 entails some fiscal easing after adjusting for the business cycle.
A stronger króna and more favourable global price developments have provided the scope to raise interest rates more slowly than was previously considered necessary. However, this does not change the need for a tighter monetary stance in the coming term, in view of growing domestic inflationary pressures. How much and how quickly the monetary stance must be tightened will depend on future developments and on how the current economic uncertainty plays out. There is, among other things, considerable uncertainty at present about the transmission of monetary policy as the effects of unusually low global interest rates have been felt increasingly in Iceland. Monetary policy formulation will also depend on developments in liquidity in connection with capital account liberalisation and whether other policy instruments are applied in order to contain demand-side pressures in the coming term. “