The National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) has been easing its monetary policy since August 2015 and has cut the key rate by a total of 1,750 basis points since then.
But the NBU's last rate cut was in May and since then inflation has continued to accelerate.
Ukraine's headline inflation rose to a higher-than-forecast 16.2 percent in August, up from 15.9 percent in July and the fourth consecutive month of rising inflation.
The rise in inflation was due to higher raw food and tobacco prices along with second-round effects from rising meat and dairy prices along with higher labor costs.
In its statement, the NBU repeated its guidance from August that it may keep its policy rate at the current level until there are clear signs of an easing of inflation risks and will resume the easing cycle once inflation risks abate and inflation expectations become well anchored.
However, today it also raised the prospects of reversing the recent easing cycle by warning it may "resort to a tighter monetary policy" if inflationary pressures rise.
This is a much stronger statement than last month when it said it will "implement a rather tight monetary policy for a longer term to put inflation back on a downward trend."
The NBU pointed to a possible rise in inflationary pressures from higher social standards that are inconsistent with the economy's productivity growth and higher inflation expectations.
Despite the rise in inflation, the central bank still expects inflation to trend downward in the second half of this year as underlying inflationary pressures remain moderate and this year's rise in the exchange rate of the hryvnia helps restrain inflation.
However, inflation is now expected to decelerate at a slower pace than forecast in the July inflation report, which saw inflation easing to 9.1 percent by the end of this year.
"As a result, the 2017 year-end inflation is projected to deviate more significantly from the mid-point target range (8% +/- 2 pp for end-2017)," the NBU said, adding demand pressures are likely to rise as consumption is picking up from higher wages, government spending and pensions.
It added that it expects inflation to return to the mid-point of its target range in the second quarter of 2018. Last month it expected inflation to return to the midpoint "throughout the first half" of 2018.
The central bank targets inflation of 7.5 percent, plus/minus 2 percentage points, by the end of the first quarter of 2018 and 7.0 percent by the end of the second quarter of 2018.
After tumbling in 2014 and 2015, the hryvnia has been more stable since March 2016 and risen against the U.S. dollar this year on improved exchange rate expectations and better global conditions for Ukrainian export commodities.
A drop in the exchange rate since late August was attributed by the NBU to "temporary and psychological factors, with economic agents' behavior following a seasonal pattern."
The hryvnia was trading at 26.18 to the dollar today, up 3 percent this year.
The National Bank of Ukraine issued the following statement:
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