Posted to the web on: 06 December 2005
Mboweni spikes talk of looming rate hike
Kevin O’Grady
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Economics Editor
RESERVE Bank governor Tito Mboweni has finally put paid to speculation about an imminent interest rate hike, listing nine reasons last night why the bank was unlikely to hike rates at its meeting starting tomorrow.
His speech at a year-end function for journalists contrasted sharply with the hawkish comments of the last meeting of the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC) in October.
At that meeting Mboweni warned South Africans to start tightening their belts in anticipation of tighter monetary policy.
In his speech entitled “So, All Things Never Remain The Same!”, Mboweni said a lot had changed for the better since the MPC’s more gloomy October outlook.
These included:
Oil prices had started to drop.
“Unit labour costs have not jumped higher as we thought might happen.”
“The exchange rate of the rand has strengthened, thereby ensuring a cushion against imported inflation.”
CPIX inflation (consumer inflation less interest costs on mortgages) “has come out less than expected”.
Producer price inflation had also dropped.
“Global inflation has not gone up as initially thought.”
“Gross domestic product growth figures show that the economy is growing nicely, so it needs no monetary or fiscal accommodation.”
“Inflation expectations … are showing a slightly downward trend.”
Widening trade deficits would result in bigger deficits on the current account of the balance of payments, which could weaken the rand and worsen the inflation outlook. “Nevertheless the overall balance of payments is looking good,” Mboweni said.
Drawing on the Latin phrase ceteris paribus, meaning “all else being equal”, Mboweni said: “It’s terrible when that principle is violated just before a meeting of the MPC.
“Based on the assumptions at the previous MPC meeting that the inflation outlook was a little concerning, the governor was mandated to warn the country that they needed to be careful.
“How things have changed.
“Since the last meeting of the MPC, the ceteris paribus principle has not held,” he said.