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Central Bank Of Armenia Lifts Interest Rate Further As Inflation Acc

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  • Central Bank Of Armenia Lifts Interest Rate Further As Inflation Acc

    CENTRAL BANK OF ARMENIA LIFTS INTEREST RATE FURTHER AS INFLATION ACCELERATES
    by Venla Sipila

    World Markets Research Center
    Global Insight
    April 7, 2008

    The Board of the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) in their 2 April meeting
    decided to lift the CBA's annual refinancing rate by a further 25
    basis points, ARKA News reports. This move takes the main policy rate
    to 6.5%. The interest rate was increased by a similar magnitude in
    March as well as February, having been left unchanged in January. The
    Board indicated that high and accelerating inflation in international
    food markets over the first quarter of the year has been reflected
    in Armenian food prices, further leading to rising cost of non-food
    goods and services.

    Indeed, ARKA News further reports that consumer prices in Armenia in
    March increased by 1.4% month-on-month (m/m), leading to the annual
    inflation rate shooting up to 9.6%. The corresponding rates in February
    registered 1.1% m/m and 7.5% year-on-year (y/y). Compared with the
    end of 2007, Armenian consumer prices increased by 4.8% by the end of
    March, further data from the National Statistical Service show. The
    CBA board pledges gradual further tightening of monetary and credit
    policy in order to contain near term inflationary pressures, to allay
    inflation expectations and to counteract the secondary effects that
    risk arising from the external inflation forces. Armenian consumer
    price inflation ended year 2007 at 6.6%, averaging 4.4% for 2007
    (see Armenia: 2 January 2008: ).

    Significance:The CBA's inflation-targeting policy has proved relatively
    successful over recent years, even if implying strong appreciation of
    the dram exchange rate, in conditions of strong foreign remittance
    and FDI inflows. However, over March, the exchange rate of the dram
    against the U.S. dollar was reported to have remained virtually stable,
    while the first quarter of the year witnessed weakening of the dram. In
    addition to Armenian inflation being pushed upwards from the cost side
    due to high prices of food, also demand side price pressures persist,
    as the robust GDP growth has proved somewhat more reluctant to cool
    than we previously expected. Domestic demand is partly boosted by
    fiscal spending.

    Adding these recent overheating signs to the effect of persistently
    high food and energy prices, inflation pressure in Armenia is likely
    to remain considerable in the near term, making achieving the target
    specified by the CBA at 4% (with 1.5% on either side) a challenging
    task.
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