- Monetary policy statement - Policy rate left unchanged


Monetary policy statement by the Board of Governors of the Central Bank of
Iceland: 

Policy rate left unchanged

The Board of Governors of the Central Bank of Iceland has decided to leave the
Bank's policy interest rate unchanged at 15.5%. 

In the wake of the depreciation of the króna during the first three months of
2008, the Bank raised the policy rate by 1.75 percentage points in two
increments, first in late March and then in early April. As could be expected,
the fall in the exchange rate pressed inflation upwards in April, and in the
months to come, inflation could rise still further than the Bank projected in
its April forecast. Increased domestic costs due to the exchange rate
depreciation, wage increases, and price hikes abroad will shape near-term
developments to a large extent. Ultimately, however, the effects of a narrowing
output gap and declining demand will dominate, and inflationary pressures will
subside. According to the Central Bank's forecast, published in the April 2008
issue of Monetary Bulletin, domestic demand will contract markedly in the next
couple of years, and the housing market will cool off. While signs of the
latter have been crystallising since early April, it is now apparent that
demand growth is waning as well. However, there are still no clear indications
of a slowdown in the labour market. 

It is of paramount importance that a short-term burst of inflation not be
allowed to generate a spiral of rising wages and prices and a falling króna. A
high policy rate and other measures taken by the Central Bank and other
authorities - including increased issuance of Government securities - are
intended to foster stability in the foreign exchange market, which is an
important precondition for controlling inflation and inflation expectations.
The currency swap agreements between the Central Bank of Iceland and the
central banks in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden had a positive effect on the
market, but they do not cure all ills. 

It will not be possible to relax the monetary stance until it has been
demonstrated that inflation is on the wane, as few things are more important
for the balance sheets of households and businesses than that disinflation
begin and continue on a firm path. The Board of Governors will continue to make
its policy rate decisions based on this fundamental consideration.
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