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Central Bank of Armenia Drives Interest Rate Lower to Spur Growth

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  • Central Bank of Armenia Drives Interest Rate Lower to Spur Growth

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    June 11, 2009



    Central Bank of Armenia Drives Interest Rate Lower to Spur Growth

    BYLINE: Venla Sipila


    The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) has continued its monetary
    loosening; according to ARKA News, the Board of the central bank
    decided to take the policy interest rate to 6.25%, down by 100 basis
    points. This is more aggressive than presenting a continuation of the
    recent monetary policy stance, and the more modest cuts enacted by the
    CBA recently. Indeed, 25-basis-point cuts were enacted in both May and
    April (seeArmenia: 13 May 2009:). Before this, the refinancing rate
    had been increased by 100 basis points in February, to support a move
    to a more flexible exchange-rate regime. The CBA Board based the
    decision on the need to support economic growth, indicating that
    further easing of monetary conditions was facilitated by the current
    inflation developments, which generally confirm the Banks'
    projections. The latest inflation data from May show consumer prices
    rising by a moderating month-on-month (m/m) rate of 1.6%. Meanwhile,
    annual inflation accelerated, however it still remained well within
    the CBA's targeted range of 4% +/-1.5 percentage points (seeArmenia: 2
    June 2009:). The CBA Board expects inflation to remain within the
    target range in the coming months. Thus, still further interest rate
    cuts may be likely, given the current need to support Armenian
    economic activity with any possible means.


    Significance:The CBA takes its current policy decisions in an
    environment where growth is sharply cooling, at the same time as
    annual inflation is seeing renewed acceleration. Thus, the demands for
    monetary policy risk becoming contradictory, as the bank needs to
    balance the need to provide support for the real sector at the same
    time as securing price stability. Moreover, the potential of even
    sharp renewed upward price pressures certainly exists, given the
    vulnerability of the dram exchange rate amid Armenia's high external
    financing requirements, and caution in further monetary loosening
    would thus be advisable. Then again, Armenian interest rates do not
    yet function as very effective policy tools, as the pass-through of
    policy rates to markets rates is still relatively weak, and thus the
    main function of rate revisions is to reflect official inflation
    expectations.
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