Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Pakistan Holds Key Policy Rate For Third Straight Time As Floods Stoke Inflation Fears


(MENAFN- Khaleej Times)

Pakistan's central bank held its key interest rate steady at 11% on Monday for a third straight meeting, extending a pause in monetary easing as policymakers weighed inflation risks from flood-hit crops against a fragile economic recovery.

The decision underscores policymakers' concern that flood damage to crops could reignite price pressures and strain growth, even as inflation has cooled and interest rates have already been cut sharply over the past year.

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The central bank said in a statement that the economy was on a "significantly stronger footing" to withstand the fallout of the floods compared with past disasters, but warned the damage to crops and supply chains had moderated growth prospects.

It now sees 2026 gross domestic product growth near the lower end of its 3.25%–4.25% forecast range.

INFLATION COULD BREACH CENTRAL BANK'S TARGET RANGE

Floods have swamped farmlands in Punjab, killing over 950 people and displacing 4.5 million, disrupting supply chains and fuelling food price fears.

"This temporary yet significant flood-induced supply shock, particularly to the crop sector, may push up headline inflation and the current account deficit from earlier expectation in FY26." the State Bank of Pakistan said.

Inflation eased to 3% in August from 4.1% in July, but the SBP projected it could breach its 5–7% target range for most of the second half of the 2026 financial year before reverting to the range in 2027. It noted food price pressures may be partly offset by recent cuts to electricity tariffs.

Thirteen of 14 analysts in a Reuters poll had expected the central bank to keep rates on hold, with one forecasting a 50-basis point cut.

The central bank also flagged fiscal and external vulnerabilities. Floods could drive up government spending and weigh on tax revenue, while crop losses may widen the trade gap, though resilient remittances and improved U.S. market access should help.

Fawad Basir, head of research at KTrade, said the SBP opted for a cautious stance, noting that while a buffer existed for a cut, it was mindful of potential repercussions for the exchange rate.

The SBP projected its foreign reserves will climb to about $15.5 billion by December.

It has cut rates by 1,100 basis points since June 2024, when they stood at a record 22% after inflation peaked near 40% in 2023. It last lowered rates by 100 bps in May and held it steady in June and July.

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