The Bank of Israel is expected to leave short-term interest rates unchanged this week, its 13th such decision in a row, though some analysts believe it should cut rates to halt the shekel that stands at a 26-year high versus the dollar.
Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter
All 16 economists polled by Reuters believe the central bank's monetary policy committee will keep the benchmark rate at an all-time low of 0.1% when the decision is announced on Monday afternoon.
Before the last meeting on Oct. 7, analysts had widely believed the next change would be a hike as early as 2022 on the heels of rising inflation and a rapid economic rebound amid a widespread COVID-19 vaccine roll-out. One MPC member voted to raise rates to 0.25% at that meeting.
Since then, the shekel has gained as much as 7% versus the dollar to late 1995 levels and is the top performing emerging currency since the pandemic began, while inflation in October and third-quarter GDP growth were lower than expected.