By CentralBankNews.info
Trinidad and Tobago’s central bank left its benchmark repo rate steady at 4.75 percent after eight consecutive rate hikes, citing the “prevailing economic climate and the short-term outlook.”
The Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago (CBTT) raised its rate by a total of 200 basis points from September 2014 through December 2015, but said that the inflationary outlook for 2016 is expected to be affected by contained demand and the reduction in Value Added Tax (VAT) to 12.5 percent from 15.0 percent along with the expansion of VAT-eligible items.
The headline inflation rate in December was 1.5 percent, up from November’s 1.4 percent, but below October’s 3.2 percent when inflation accelerated due to a 15 percent increase in the price of diesel and super gasoline in the government’s 2015/16 budget.
Food inflation slowed to 2.7 percent in December from 6.1 percent in October and 14.6 percent in January 2015.
In December the CBTT said the introduction of VAT on all previously-exempt items, most of which are in the food basket of the inflation measure, could push core inflation to almost 3.5 percent and food inflation into double digit territory so inflation to pick up to around 5 percent in early 2016.
Domestic crude oil and natural gas output fell in the October-November period, with the fall in gas output affecting downstream industries and data point to tepid activity in some non-energy sectors.
Although there have been reports of layoffs in construction, manufacturing and energy sectors, the CBTT said labour market conditions still appeared favorable. But the persistence of low oil prices suggest that fiscal stimulus is likely to be constrained in coming months.
With long-term interest rates in the U.S. slipping in response to investors searching for safe haven, the spread between TT and US 10-year yields widened to 187 basis points as of Jan. 25 from 161 points in December, the central bank said.
The central bank considers higher domestic rates to be necessary to keep returns on TT assets competitive to curb portfolio outflows and discourage heavy consumer borrowing for the import of consumer durables, major source of demand for foreign exchange.
The Trinidadian dollar was trading at 6.43 to the U.S. dollar today, slightly down from 6.42 at the start of the year.
It is the central bank’s first monetary policy decision under its new governor, Alvin Hilaire, former deputy governor. Hilaire was appointed by by the country’s president with effect from Dec. 23, 2015 following weeks of local speculation about the standing of Governor Jawala Rambarran.
On Dec. 4 Rambarran had said that Trinidad and Tobago was in recession and named a number of private firms that were buying foreign exchange. His comments were disputed by both the finance minister and the prime minister.
Speaking to journalists last month, Hilaire said he would not distance himself from the statements made by Rambarran, the only T&T governor to have been fired.
The Gross Domestic Product of Trinidad and Tobago expanded by 1.5 percent in the third quarter from the second quarter but on an annual basis GDP in the third quarter contracted by 2.0 percent, after shrinking by 2.2 percent in the second quarter and 1.5 percent in the first quarter.
The Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago issued the following statement: