Pakistan’s central bank cuts interest rates to boost economy
PAKISTAN’S central bank cut its key interest rate by 150 basis points on Monday (Jun 10) in a widely-expected move, its first rate reduction in nearly four years as it strives to boost growth amid a sharp decline in retail inflation.
The decision to cut the key rate to 20.5 per cent comes two days ahead of Pakistan’s annual budget and a week after data showed inflation slowed to a 30-month low of 11.8 per cent in May.
“The significant decline in inflation since February was broadly in line with expectations, (but) the May outturn was better than anticipated earlier,” the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said in a statement.
The SBP last changed rates in an emergency meeting in late June last year, when it raised them by 100 basis points to a record high of 22 per cent to stabilise the economy and curb inflation that hit a record high of 38 per cent last year and had stayed above 20 per cent since May 2022.
Between September 2021 and June 2023, the SBP raised rates by 1,500 basis points to rein in inflation and secure a short-term US$3 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to stave off an imminent default.
Economic activity in Pakistan has slowed over the last two years, and high rates have kept the government’s borrowing costs elevated. With the new government looking to tighten its purse strings, lower rates will be critical in helping it reduce domestic borrowing costs.
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“As anticipated, SBP has taken a step towards narrowing the real interest rate gap to stimulate the economy and reduce its debt servicing burden,” said Muhammad Ali, market analyst at AKD Securities.
GDP growth in the current financial year to June 30 is expected to be between 2 per cent and 3 per cent after a 0.17 per cent deceleration in the 2022-23 fiscal year. The government is now targeting 3.6 per cent growth in the year starting July amid an uptick in economic activity.
‘Upside inflation risks’
However, the SBP sees upside risks to the near-term inflation outlook associated with upcoming budgetary measures and uncertainty regarding future energy price adjustments.
The IMF is prescribing measures for the Pakistani government, including increasing revenue through widening the tax base and power tariff hikes, for a longer-term bailout of around US$6 billion to US$8 billion.
The SBP said there has been limited progress in addressing structural weaknesses to broaden the tax base and initiating energy sector reforms, and so it expects budgetary measures to be largely based on tax and levy increases.
It emphasised that broadening the tax base and reforming loss-making public sector enterprises would help achieve fiscal sustainability on a more durable basis, adding that this was imperative to keep inflation on a downward trajectory and contain balance of payments pressures.
The statement also flagged a risk of inflation rising significantly in July before trending down gradually during the next financial year. REUTERS
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