State Bank of Pakistan’s monetary policy committee increased the target rate by 300 basis points from 17 per cent, the central bank said in a statement on its website. The move was seen by 6 of 38 economists, most of whom expected a 200-basis-point hike. The current 20 per cent is the highest since June 1997 when the central bank used a different benchmark, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“The MPC noted that the recent fiscal adjustments and exchange rate depreciation have led to a significant deterioration in the near term inflation outlook and a further upward drift in inflation expectations,” the central bank statement said. “The short-term costs of bringing down inflation are lower than the long-term costs of allowing it to become entrenched.”
The IMF funding is critical for the South Asian economy, which has been in economic turmoil, to unlock other bilateral and multilateral external financing.
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