Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Central Bank Raises Rates Further As Inflation Intensifies

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Central Bank Raises Rates Further As Inflation Intensifies

    ARMENIAN CENTRAL BANK RAISES RATES FURTHER AS INFLATION INTENSIFIES
    BYLINE: Venla Sipila

    Global Insight
    March 7, 2011

    The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) has increased its refinancing
    interest rate by 50 basis points, Reuters reports. This decision
    followed a similar move taken in February, and brought the policy
    rate to 8.25%. This further monetary tightening closely followed
    the publication of February inflation data by the Armenian National
    Statistical Service, which showed that consumer prices in the month
    soared by 12.4% year-on-year (y/y), following an increase of 10.6% y/y
    in January. In month-on-month (m/m) comparison, prices rose by 1.9%,
    having now advanced by 4.8% during the first two months of the year.

    As expected, this rapid gain in consumer prices can mainly be traced
    back to increases in the cost of food; this surged by 18.8% y/y in
    February, bringing the cumulative gain since the beginning of the
    year to 7.0%. Indeed, the CBA also identified high global food and
    commodity prices for the intense inflation pressures, noting that the
    contribution of food on overall consumer price inflation in February
    stood at around 10.1 percentage points. Inflation substantially
    exceeds the CBA's target range of 4.5% with a fluctuation band of
    1.5 percentage points either side, and the central bank outlined
    further gradual tightening of monetary policy in the coming months,
    in order to bring the inflation rate back within the target range in
    the second half of this year.

    Significance:The CBA's monetary policy has now clearly entered
    a new cycle, tightening from February, following eight months of
    stable rates. The central bank seems to suggest that the extremely
    high food and commodity prices have started to have some impact on
    inflation expectations as well, thus reaching beyond their cost-side
    inflationary effects. On the other hand, given Armenia's still
    relatively undeveloped financial environment, the key function of the
    policy rates is to signal the monetary authorities' own inflation
    expectations. Pressures from commodity prices are likely to remain
    considerable in the near term. However, Russia has agreed to keep its
    gas prices constant in 2011, and this brightens the inflation outlook
    somewhat. Fearful of social unrest as a result of rising gas prices,
    ArmRosGazprom, the Armenian gas distributor, had already vowed to keep
    retail prices constant, even if Russian import prices have increased
    from April, as planned before.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X