Poland's central bank probably will lower borrowing costs, the second highest in the European Union, for the first time since June 2003
Published:
30 March 2005 y., Wednesday
Poland's central bank probably will lower borrowing costs, the second highest in the European Union, for the first time since June 2003 after inflation slowed, a survey of economists showed.
The Monetary Policy Council may cut the benchmark seven-day intervention rate by half a point to 6 percent today, according to the median estimate of 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg March 18-29. The decision will be announced after noon in Warsaw.
The bank must bring interest rates closer to the European Central Bank's 2 percent benchmark rate as Poland seeks to meet terms to adopt the euro by 2010. Consumer prices fell 0.1 percent in February and annual inflation slowed to 3.6 percent, a nine- month low, after the zloty's 24 percent surge against the dollar and 16 percent gain against the euro last year cut import costs.
Policy makers have said annual inflation will reach the central bank's target of 2.5 percent as early as the end of June.
Šaltinis:
Bloomberg
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Romanian business delegation from the energy sector will be visiting India in March to explore possibilities of investment in refineries, oil and gas fields.
more »
A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Thursday dealt a blow to Yukos’ bankruptcy case, ruling the embattled Russian oil company cannot seek information about whether oil monopoly Gazprom illegally took part in the sale of Yukos’ main oil producing unit
more »
Russian Agricultural Minister Alexei Gordeyev said on Saturday that Russia intends to promote production of its agrarian companies to the EU market
more »
Security company wins contract with Austrian banks
more »
Deutsche Bank AG wants to expand its Russian banking operations and is considering purchasing stakes in two Moscow banks
more »
A government-sponsored agency said Thursday it attracted investments worth over $2 billion in the Czech Republic last year
more »
The Russian Finance Ministry has set aside $85.273 million and 9.328 million euros for its next payments to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the ministry said
more »
The Russian government approved on Thursday a package of six bills intended to improve the country's bankruptcy laws
more »
The deficit of trade of the Republic of Moldova could exceed one billion USD in 2005
more »
Labour Ministry: Interim period for labour from new EU states causes problems
more »