He said the rise in processed food prices and the 13% annual increase in service prices gave reason for concerns. "If someone had any bold thoughts about rate cuts any time soon, we can forget that now," he added. Central bank Deputy Governor Barnabas Virag said at the end of March that inflation would ease slowly in the coming months before declining substantially in the second half of the year. The bank forecasts average inflation to fall to within a range of 15.0-19.5% in 2023 before dropping to 3.0-5.0% in 2024. Markets have been betting on rate cuts this year while the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban has urged policy loosening to free up the economy.
Virag has said the base should be maintained for a prolonged period.
Central European economies are all facing double-digit
inflation, stronger than in the euro zone, with high food prices
a large culprit lately.
Preliminary March data from Poland earlier showed headline
inflation staying above 16%, while Czech inflation was expected
to slow to 14.9% in March, from 16.7% a month earlier, according
to a Reuters poll ahead of a Thursday release.
(Reporting by Jason Hovet in Prague and Krisztina Than in
Budapest; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)