(Adds comment, details, updates prices)
By Jan Lopatka
PRAGUE, Feb 8 (Reuters) - Czech inflation jumped to a 9-year high in January on higher Value Added Tax and health costs, sending the crown currency to a new peak as the market unwound bets on interest rate cuts later this year.
The Czech Statistical Bureau said on Friday that consumer prices jumped 3 percent in Janaury, taking the year-on-year rate to 7.5 percent, the highest since November 1998.
The market had expected 1.9 percent monthly and 6.2 percent year on year inflation.
The government raised VAT in January on basic items such as food to 9 percent from 5 percent and introduced a fee of 30 crowns ($1.71) for seeing a doctor. Home rental prices were also raised.
"Unless western Europe is going into recession and the European Central Bank starts an easing cycle rate cuts in the Czech Republic -- expressed at yesterday central bank press conference -- are very unlikely," said JP Morgan economist Miroslav Plojhar.
The crown jumped 0.7 percent after the data to an all-time high of 25.53 to the euro <EURCZK=>, before dipping back to 25.66 at 1020 GMT.
Inflation has been on the rise across central Europe where fast economic growth has combined with global commodity price rises to push prices up.
But the statistical bureau said nearly all of the January figure -- 2.9 percentage points -- could be attributed to the administrative measures.
"If there was no tax hike and the consumer basket excluded items with regulated prices, year-on-year inflation would be 2.8-3.0 percent," said Jiri Mrazek, chief of price statistics department at the CSU.
The moves were part of the centre-right government's reforms, which restructured taxes in favour of indirect levies, raised the cost of healthcare and cut social benefits.
The government plans to gradually slash the budget deficit, planned at 2.95 percent of gross domestic product this year, a high figure at a time of 4-5 percent economic growth.
RATE CUTS UNLIKELY
The inflation data followed a 25 basis point interest rate increase to 3.75 percent on Thursday, which still left rates well below the inflation rate.
The central bank looks 12-18 months ahead in its policymaking and said on Thursday that the next move in rates could be in either direction.
The bank expects inflation to fall to 2.4 percent in mid-2009, below its 3 percent target, as the effect of one-off price increases fades.
The central bank does not take into account the effect of changes in regulated prices on the headline inflation rate when its sets interests rates.
On Thursday, for the first time, the bank released a forecast for interbank interest rates. This suggested monetary policy may be eased by the end of the year, sending money market rates and the currency lower.
But Friday's data reversed the fall in money market rates. "We jumped by 6 basis points on the short end, that reflects the inflation move," said Dalimil Vyskovsky, money market trader at Komercni Banka.
(For table of data please double click [
], for instant view double click ID:nL08500428])(Additional reporting by Petra Vosdstrcilova and Pavel Mahdal)