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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Business

Indonesia holds key interest rate but reins in banks

FILE PHOTO: Logo of Indonesia's central bank, Bank Indonesia, as seen in Jakarta, Indonesia, Jan 19, 2017. (Reuters)

JAKARTA: Indonesia's central bank on Tuesday announced more aggressive hikes in the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for banks, expecting inflation to rise slightly above its target band this year, but kept interest rates unchanged at a record low.

Bank Indonesia (BI) announced a quicker pace in RRR hikes, ordering banks to park 7.5% of their reserves starting July and 9% from September. This compared with BI's previously announced policy path, in which BI had set three staggered RRR hikes this year from 3.5% to 6.5% in September.

BI left the benchmark 7-day reverse repurchase rate at a record low of 3.50%, as expected by 25 of 27 economists polled by Reuters. Its two other main rates were also unchanged.

During the pandemic, BI cut interest rates by a total of 150 basis points and injected billions of dollars into the financial system and the RRR hikes were its first move to normalise monetary policy.

Governor Perry Warjiyo said inflation will be slightly higher than BI's 2% to 4% target range this year, but will come down to within target next year, which he described as "manageable".

The inflation outlook "reduces the need to respond through interest rates like other central banks," Warjiyo said.

He has previously said BI would maintain interest rates at record lows until it sees signs of pressure on core inflation.

April's annual inflation rate was 3.47%, a two-year high.

The government last week obtained parliamentary approval to boost energy subsidies by $24 billion to keep most energy prices unchanged in a bid to keep inflation benign.

Radhika Rao, Senior Economist at DBS Bank in Singapore, said in an email energy subsidies had dampened inflation risks.

"This coupled with limited rupiah depreciation versus regional peers lowered the urgency for Bank Indonesia to normalise policy," said Rao, noting how "non-rate levers" like RRR were being used to absorb liquidity.

Indonesia's economy grew 5.01% in the first quarter, helped by a boom in commodities' exports and the reopening of the economy from Covid-19 curbs. 

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