(Repeats story published on June 2)
* WHAT: Czech May inflation seen at 0.4 pct m/m, 6.8 pct y/y
* WHEN: June 9
* Slow drop in inflation from nine-year hikes speaks in favour of flat interest rates, but risk still on the upside
By Jan Lopatka and Mirka Krufova
PRAGUE (Reuters) - Czech consumer prices probably rose 0.4 percent in May on fuel and food prices and tax hikes, keeping annual inflation on a slow path down from where it has climbed high above the central bank's target, a survey showed on Monday.
The Reuters poll of 12 analysts <CZ/ECON04> showed the market expected May year-on-year inflation of 6.8 percent, flat from the previous month and slightly down from nine-year highs of 7.5 percent in January and February.
Czech inflation has jumped more than in other central European countries after sales and excise tax hikes in January, but the firming crown currency has helped keep interest rates below the euro zone.
The poll saw a recovery in industrial output and retail sales in April following poor figures for March, but analysts said the economy was cooling down as demand faltered abroad and the strong currency squeezed exporters' margins.
The inflation reading would not likely change the outlook for flat interest rates if the rise came mainly from fuels, which are outside the scope of monetary policy, said Citibank economist Jaromir Sindel.
"We do not expect strong monetary policy implications, if our forecast materialises, as the May inflation is likely to reflect mainly an increase in fuel prices," he said.
"However, we do not expect the CNB (central bank) to decrease its interest rate in 2008. Moreover, we see an upside risk to our forecast of stable rates in the second and third quarters, as we feel the labour market is an inflationary factor."
The central bank has raised interest rates <CZRP=> <CZCBIR=ECI> five times to 3.75 percent over the past year but has paused since February. Many analysts believe the next move will be down, as inflation forecasts show a drop in price growth in early 2009.
But a number of analysts believe the bank may once more hike rates over the summer before it reaches the top of the cycle. "We feel that the move back to the CNB's target range (3 percent +/- 1 percentage point) will be a far slower and precarious journey than the bank is expecting," said Lauren van Biljon of 4castweb.
The poll showed the labour market would continue to be tight, with unemployment dipping to a fresh record low of 4.9 percent at the end of May.
The poll showed industrial output rising 8.5 percent year-on-year in April after a 2.1 percent drop in March, and retail sales rising 5.6 percent after a 2.9 percent March decline.
"Industrial output and retail sales (will) bounce back from negative March readings, but (there is) little doubt that domestic demand is slowing," van Lauren said.
Economists forecast in a separate Reuters poll <CZ/ECON17> full-year economic growth of 4.8 percent, down from 6.5 percent last year, due to the strong crown currency and weaker demand both home and abroad.
The poll showed foreign trade data, due out on June 6 as the first release this month, would show an April monthly surplus of 6 billion crowns, down from 8.12 billion March, which surprised with a year-on-year nominal drop in both imports and exports. (For a TABLE with the poll results, click on [
] (Writing by Jan Lopatka; Editing by Malcolm Whittaker)