Business Standard

MPC members worried about rising prices

- ANUP ROY

The six-member monetary policy committee (MPC) was concerned with rising inflation, and one member had voted for a hike in rates, while another argued for just short of changing the stance of the policy from neutral towards hawkish, said the edited minutes of the twoday meeting. On February 7, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) kept its policy rates unchanged at 6 per cent and the stance at neutral, while indicating it was in for a long pause on rates. The policy was seen as less hawkish than anticipate­d by the markets, even as the retail inflation rate in December hit a 17-month high of 5.21 per cent.

Going by the minutes, external member Ravindra Dholakia, who until the last policy had advocated a cut in policy rates, expressed his discomfort with rising prices this time.

“Although the headline inflation was expected to rise in November and December last year, the extent of the increase was higher than my expectatio­n,” said Dholakia. He argued saying “prudence lay in following the policy of wait and watch and allow a clearer picture to emerge”, even as the inflation numbers are likely decline in the next three-four months.

RBI’s Executive Director Michael Patra said the nearterm inflation outlook up to mid-2018 likely to drift above the target. The expected easing of inflation between July 2018 and March 2019 would largely be statistica­l as the HRA effect wanes. “The target is in danger of getting out of reach. Over the next few months, the upper tolerance band is under threat. This could seriously dent the credibilit­y of the MPC’s commitment to the target,” Patra said. The real policy rate (policy repo rate minus inflation) was below 1 per cent and could fall further sans policy action, which is “completely misaligned with underlying fundamenta­ls and the economy’s prospects at a time when activity is picking up. In view of the prolonged period of status quo, a series of rate increases may be warranted to remove excessive accommodat­ion,” Patra said.

“The time to begin is upon us. I vote for an increase of 25 basis points in the policy rate to commence the withdrawal of accommodat­ion,” the minutes quoted Patra.

Deputy Governor Viral Acharya said he would have favoured changing the stance from “neutral” to “withdrawal of accommodat­ion,” but for two reasons: first, rising oil prices would also encourage rising shale gas production, which could “dampen oil prices swiftly.” “Second, for a flexible inflation targeting framework, the growth trajectory relative to potential output has to be considered too. On this front, the output gap remains somewhat negative though it has been steadily closing.” RBI Governor Urjit Patel favoured examining incoming data for “greater clarity on the persistenc­e of inflationa­ry pressures.”

 ??  ?? ( From left) File photo of RBI Deputy Governors NS Vishwanath­an, Viral V Acharya, and RBI Governor Urjit Patel at the press conference announcing the RBI monetary policy in Mumbai on February 7
( From left) File photo of RBI Deputy Governors NS Vishwanath­an, Viral V Acharya, and RBI Governor Urjit Patel at the press conference announcing the RBI monetary policy in Mumbai on February 7

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