(Updates throughout)
WELLINGTON, Dec 5 (Reuters) - Reserve Bank of New Zealand Governor Grant Spencer said on Tuesday that the central bank would have to consider further easing monetary policy if non-traded inflation does not pick up from late 2018 as expected, driving the local currency higher.
New Zealand's central bank has kept interest rates at a record low of 1.75 percent for seven consecutive meetings.
It has consistently maintained its position that monetary policy will remain accommodative for a considerable period as the economy slows and inflation remains well within the 1-3 percent target band.
"In the context of the November Monetary Policy Statement, non-traded inflation is forecast to pick up from late 2018 in response to increasing capacity pressures," Spencer said in a speech delivered to the Institute of Directors in Auckland.
"If this response does not eventuate then we would have to consider a further easing of policy to generate additional domestic demand pressure, particularly if global inflation remains low in line with our forecasts."
The New Zealand dollar
jumped to $0.6891 from around $0.6866 before Specer's speech. The central bank has launched a review of the Reserve Bank Act with the aim of adding maximising employment as a monetary policy goal alongside inflation.
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