Business Standard

RBI rate hike will impact India Inc’s capex: CII

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Rate hike by the Reserve Bank of India will increase the cost of doing business and impact capital expenditur­e by India Inc, industry body Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) warned on Tuesday.

“The cost of doing business goes up because of the hike and it will impact capex (capital expenditur­e) by the industry,” CII president and vice-chairman of Bharti Enterprise­s Rakesh Bharti Mittal told reporters here.

He was, however, quick to add that the normal monsoon and supply side measures will have a cooling effect on inflation and help restrict the rate hikes to just the one taken earlier this month.

The industry has also promised a capex of ~500 billion in the recent months, he said, adding that an uptick in capacity utilisatio­n levels to 80 per cent can prod more industries to join the club.

The RBI may also look at cutting the recently implemente­d hike and returning to the “benign” rate environmen­t once it sees comfort on the inflation front, he said.

With a focus on its core objective of keeping inflation in a targeted range in the medium term, the central bank had hiked repo rate, or the rate at which it lends to the banks, by 0.25 per cent this month.

Many lenders had increased their lending rates prior to the policy review and after that, indicating a broader direction in which the rates are headed.

Kotak Mahindra Bank’s Managing Director and Chief Executive, Uday Kotak, who is also the president-designate for CII, said the RBI was responding to the risks that it is anticipati­ng by keeping in mind its inflation targeting objective. He was quick to add that the apex bank had done a “balancing act” by keeping the stance of the policy at neutral which allows for any reversals in rates.

Mittal flagged availabili­ty of credit as a worry, stating that smaller businesses, which will get affected, are the ones that need attention at present.

He said 11 banks under the prompt corrective action (PCA) framework, which puts restrictio­ns on normal lending activities, reduces their ability to support the needs of growth.

When asked about the difference between 2014, when the Narendra Modi regime kicked-off with a clear majority, and now, Kotak said the “macros” were working for the benefit of the country like lower oil prices, but the “micros” within the country were tough.

“The situation has reversed now, where the macros are getting tougher through surge in oil prices, rising protection­ist tendencies in the world and hardening interest rates globally but the micros are better,” the banker said.

 ?? PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR ?? ( From left) CII President-designate Uday Kotak and President Rakesh Bharti Mittal, with Chairman, CII Western Region, Piruz Khambatta at the industry body’s press conference in Mumbai on Tuesday
PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR ( From left) CII President-designate Uday Kotak and President Rakesh Bharti Mittal, with Chairman, CII Western Region, Piruz Khambatta at the industry body’s press conference in Mumbai on Tuesday

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