Singapore tightens monetary policy as energy-price shock raises inflation risks
The Facts
- The Monetary Authority of Singapore tightened monetary policy on April 14.
- MAS said it would slightly increase the rate of appreciation of the S$NEER policy band, with no change to the band’s width or center.
- MAS linked the policy move to higher inflation risks from rising imported energy costs associated with the Middle East conflict.
- MAS raised its 2026 core and headline inflation forecast ranges to 1.5% to 2.5%, up from 1.0% to 2.0%.
- Before the decision, 15 of 18 economists in a Bloomberg survey expected MAS to tighten policy, while three expected no change.
- Singapore’s first-quarter economy contracted on a quarter-on-quarter basis, adding to concerns about slowing growth as MAS tightened policy.
Context
What exactly did MAS change?
MAS said it would "increase slightly" the rate of appreciation of the Singapore dollar nominal effective exchange rate, or S$NEER, policy band, while keeping the band’s width and center unchanged CNBC,CNA. In practice, that means allowing the Singapore dollar to strengthen faster to help reduce imported inflation Straits Times,CNA.
Why is Singapore especially affected by the energy shock?
Singapore is a small, trade-dependent economy, so higher global oil and gas prices feed into domestic costs through electricity, transport, and imported goods and services Reuters,FXStreet. MAS said imported energy costs had already risen and that prices of a wider range of imported goods and services were expected to increase in the quarters ahead Straits Times,CNA.
Why does MAS use the exchange rate instead of interest rates?
Singapore uses the exchange rate as its main monetary policy tool because total trade is more than three times its GDP, making the economy highly sensitive to imported inflation and external demand CNA. MAS therefore manages policy through the S$NEER band rather than a conventional policy interest rate Yahoo News,Star .
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