"So we are determined absolutely determined to bring inflation back down to its target," Yaron said, referring to the government' 1-3% annual target. "And if that means continuing raising rates, and that is our primary tool, that's what we will do." Israel's inflation rate reached a 2008 high of 5.4% in January. February data are slated for release later on Wednesday and economists polled by Reuters estimate a 5.0% rate. In a bid to contain inflation, the Bank of Israel has raised its benchmark interest rate to 4.25% from 0.1% over the past year. Yaron also criticised the Israeli government's proposals to overhaul the judiciary, saying the plan as of now could weaken the courts' independence. "The process itself is hasty and does not have a wide agreement in the public," he said. (Reporting by Steven Scheer; Editing by Toby Chopra)
Messaging: steven.scheer.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net; Twitter: @StevenMScheer)) JERUSALEM, March 15 (Reuters) - Bank of Israel Governor
Amir Yaron said interest rate hikes will likely continue since
inflation remains too high, while urging the government to
maintain the independence of the country's judicial system.
In an interview with CNN, Yaron said that in Israel and
globally, "we are seeing stickiness of inflation", particularly
in services.
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