@selah. A good article on factors that cause inflatio:- namely food and energy. These are the traditional factors that had made a big impact, but the change in inflation stats has sterlized the previous volatility.
But you have to look at the crude oil prices and current deficit for more evidence that imported inflation is low. The current deficit declined to US$792 mn or a 2.5% to GDP ratio (our best position for a number of years) thanks to lower imports, recovering exports and improved services. And compare that to US$2.64 bn deficit a year ago or a 8.5% to GDP. I think that's what's driving inflation down.
So this gives the CBK the confidence to lower interest rates even though M3 is growing at 26% (near Safcom IPO levels). Maybe the CBK believes the current of inflation is still too low, but wants to remain cautious by mopping up liquidity through the 31bn bond. They know there's a dislocation between raising funds and spending and may use that to regulate the money supply more efficiently.
But the fact is that credit to the private and public sector have traditionally had an inverse relationship, where one is substituted for another. Looking at correlation the last few months has shown that relationship no longer exists as govt is still borrowing (crowding out the private sector). This is counterproductive to the recent moves to lower lending rates and thus the policy is ineffective. Household lending is still growing too slow, the economy is govt expenditure driven and not highly influenced by domestic investment. So inflation could rise if govt spending filters to ordinary folk, but it isn't, is it?
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http://www.businessdaily...0/-/j3sycmz/-/index.html“We are the middle children of history man, no purpose or place. We have no great war, no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war, our great depression is our lives!" – Tyler Durden