Indonesia cuts key rate to help weak economy

By REUTERS

bank-indonesia-2Indonesia’s central bank, which resisted cutting its benchmark interest rate for months, did so on Thursday in a bid to lift an economy growing at its slowest rate in six years.

The benchmark policy rate was lowered by 25 basis points to 7.25%, while the overnight deposit facility rate and lending facility rate were also cut by the same amount to 5.25% and 7.75%respectively.

The last time the benchmark rate was changed was in February, when it was reduced by 25 basis points to 7.50%.

The decision was announced hours after explosions and gunfire in central Jakarta less than two kilometres from where Bank Indonesia (BI) was holding its first policy meeting of 2016.

Ten of 16 analysts in a Reuters poll had predicted a rate cut on Thursday.

Some analysts expect Thursday’s cut will be the first in an easing cycle. BI said it will assess the need for further monetary policy loosening in future.

The rupiah, whose stability has been a prime concern for BI, weakened after the Jakarta attacks and strengthened slightly after the rate cut announcement.

Economists welcomed the rate cut.

The move “should provide a long-overdue boost to the struggling economy,” said Daniel Martin at Capital Economics in Singapore.

Widening room

At policy meetings since October, Bank Indonesia (BI) has said it saw widening room to loosen monetary policy, but it had refrained from cutting its benchmark rate ahead of the Federal Reserve’s first US rate hike in nearly a decade. BI was concerned lower domestic rates could spark capital outflows and weaken the fragile rupiah.

rupee-rupiahIn 2015, the rupiah was Asia’s second-worst performing currency, falling by 10% against the dollar and touching 17-year lows.

But in the fourth quarter, it was best performing one with a 6.2% jump. It has not been as badly hit as many other currencies by the early 2016 emerging market rout.

The easing of annual inflation to a six-year low of 3.35% in December has provided room for the rate cut.

Growth in Southeast Asia’s largest economy is expected at the bottom of BI’s target range of 4.7-5.1% in 2015, making it the slowest since 2009.

The central bank has said 2016 growth is expected at 5.2%-5.6%.

— By Hidayat Setiaji & Gayatri Suroyo