The shadow of coronavirus has impacted what would otherwise have been a very upbeat monetary policy statement. Photo / AP
COMMENT:
In times of crisis it's important that our leaders hold their nerve.
Nobody wanted to see a panicked reaction to coronavirus from the Reserve Bank.
Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr and his monetary policy team have certainly played it cool today - holding the official cash rate at 1per cent and parking the epidemic in the "downside risk" basket.
As the number of cases and deaths continues to rise it's easy to find reasons to worry about the outbreak.
To do so would have put the bank at the front of the central banks around the world, effectively guessing at the outcome with no more insight than any other interested observers.
A rate cut today would have grabbed global headlines, feeding into fears of global economic fallout.
The Reserve Bank did cut its GDP forecasts for the first quarter (from 0.7 per cent to 0.4 per cent) but that appears to have been largely offset by the view that the rest of the economy is better shape than it previously thought.
The trade war has abated, the terms of trade have been strong, unemployment is low and we've now got a big new chunk of Government spending on infrastructure adding to stimulus.
Having made the call to view coronavirus as unknown entity (a known unknown, for fans of Donald Rumsfeld's uncertainty matrix) the monetary policy committee has opted to watch and wait.
That has left with them with little more to say on the issue.
If the outbreak does prove worse than expected - if it spreads more widely outside China or remains disruptive into the second quarter of the year - then "monetary policy had time to adjust", they said.