Home ›› 20 Jul 2022 ›› Asia Biz
Vietnam will stick to a monetary policy that is “supportive for economic growth”, while closely monitoring inflation, the country’s central bank said on Tuesday.
The Southeast Asian country’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the second quarter quickened to 7.72per cent from an expansion of 5.05per cent in the first quarter, but authorities warned of challenges like rising inflation in the second half of the year.
“If inflation remains under control, the monetary policy will continue to be implemented in a way that is supportive for economic growth,” the State Bank of Vietnam told Reuters in an emailed statement. Central banks across the world are raising their policy interest rates, some aggressively, to contain inflation that is hitting multi-decade highs in some countries. Vietnam’s consumer prices in June rose 3.37per cent from a year earlier, led by an increase in the cost of food and energy. Vietnam aims to cap inflation at 4per cent for this year. The central bank said it has kept its policy rates unchanged this year while helping local banks to increase their liquidity, “and this has helped businesses and the economy to have better access to bank loans.”
The central bank said it encourages financial institutions to cut costs to be able to lower their lending interest rates to support business activities, adding that it will ensure their liquidity by using open market operations.