(Repeats story published on Wednesday)
* Risk of lower potential output a reason for stable rates
* Rates could go either way, depending on risks
By Jana Mlcochova
PRAGUE, Nov 18 (Reuters) - The next move in Czech interest rates could either be a cut or a hike and it should not be assumed they were at their lowest despite a risk inflation could rise above expectations, central bank Vice Governor Mojmir Hampl said.
The bank has axed borrowing costs in six cuts since August last year by a cumulative 2.5 percentage points to a record low of 1.25 percent, and its fresh economic forecast assumes more easing.
Hampl's vote helped form a tight 4-3 majority at the bank's Nov 5 meeting which left rates flat.
As a deputy governor he was the most senior member on the board to defy the governor and the other vice governor who called for a 25 basis point cut.
The development in the balance of risks to the bank's forecast was key for Hampl's next decision on rates, he told Reuters in an interview.
But for now one of the main risks was that the economy could emerge from the crisis with lower potential output, which could lead to a rise in demand-led price pressures, requiring tighter monetary conditions, he said.
"There is a great uncertainty whether the crisis has not led to a sudden one-off change in the potential output of our economy," Hampl said in remarks agreed for publication on Wednesday.
"If that was the case... then rates should be higher (than the baseline interest rate trajectory assumes)," he said.
The board debated the notion of slower productivity growth as part of a sensitivity analysis to the new baseline economic forecast.
The bank's latest labour market outlook showed wage growth could dip less and unemployment growth could be slower than assumed earlier, suggesting demand may not fade as fast as expected.
Also, demand had a long-lasting momentum and although it was weak there was a risk it would at some point overrun production capacity.
Hampl said as a caveat that his forecast could be wrong and noted that his views a year ago that the country needed moderately stricter monetary policy conditions had not materialized.
OTHER RISKS MAY PREVAIL, RATES CAN CHANGE
The baseline scenario of the bank's staff forecast made available for the last meeting shows room for further policy easing as it forecasts the three-month interbank rate (PRIBOR) at 1.1 percent in the fourth quarter this year, below the present two-week repo rate <CZCBIR=ECI>.
The forecast implies a cut and monetary policy-relevant inflation is still forecast below target. Headline inflation, however, is forecast above target due to one-off indirect tax hikes.
But the sensitivity analysis that Hampl cited showed a touch higher PRIBOR and inflation, a weaker crown <EURCZK=> and slower growth, suggesting higher interest rates.
But the balance of risks could swing in any direction before the board's next rate meeting, on Dec. 16, Hampl said, and other risks could rise, overshadowing his present worry of a dip in potential.
"My last decision and arguments that led me to it definitely do not mean that at some other time in future there will not be other stronger arguments..." he said. "Rates can of course change. They can change in both directions."
The board was split twice in a row on whether to cut or hold rates, with Governor Zdenek Tuma overruled by a majority both times. In previous rate decisions, he has led the majority.
Tuma and the other two dissenters saw the economy still under pressure and urged a cut to bring inflation to the bank's new 2 percent target from -0.2 percent in October.
Central banks in the region are either in an easing cycle or have switched to a neutral bias. Hungary's policymakers are widely expected to cut rates next Monday, while in Poland, the bank kept rates on hold and is likely to remain in a neutral mode in coming months.