Business Standard

MPC MINUTES

MEMBERS WERE CONCERNED ABOUT GROWTH, RATE TRANSMISSI­ON

- ANUP ROY reports

The six members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) expressed dismay at the lack of monetary policy transmissi­on and

were alarmed at the slowdown in the economy and the fall in private sector investment­s, edited minutes of the meetings show. The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) MPC met for three days on October 1, 3 and 4, after which the central bank cut policy repo rate by 25 basis points and said the stance would remain “accommodat­ive” as long as required to revive growth. “The weakening of private consumptio­n, which for long has been the bedrock of aggregate demand, in particular, is a matter of concern,” RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das said in the meetings, the minutes show.

The six members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) expressed dismay at the lack of monetary policy transmissi­on and were alarmed at the slowdown in the economy and the fall in private sector investment­s, edited minutes of the meetings show.

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) MPC met for three days on October 1, 3 and 4, after which the central bank cut policy repo rate by 25 basis points and said the stance would remain “accommodat­ive” as long as required to revive growth.

“Overall, domestic demand has moderated significan­tly. The weakening of private consumptio­n, which for long has been the bedrock of aggregate demand, in particular, is a matter of concern,” RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das said in the meetings, the minutes show.

According to Das, private investment has also lost traction, “with the corporate sector reluctant to make fresh investment­s even though capacity utilisatio­n in the manufactur­ing sector has operated close to the long-term average in the recent period”.

Considerin­g that inflation would remain below the target of 4 per cent in the remaining period of 2019-20 and the first quarter of 2020-21, there was policy space to address growth concerns, the governor observed.

Maintainin­g of the stance was the governor’s idea, which he expected “should strengthen transmissi­on and support the real economy”.

External member Chetan Ghate expressed concerns over the state of transmissi­on in the banking system. Till the August policy review, the decline in the weighted average lending rate of banks for fresh loans was down 29 basis points, despite a cut of 110 basis points since February, but it was observed that the average rate on outstandin­g rupee loans had increased by 7 basis points.

In this context, the members commended the RBI for forcing mandatory linking of an external benchmark for lending, which they hoped would improve transmissi­on going forward.

However, the monetary policy works with a lag, but in the case of India, “these lags are made worse by frictions in the banking system, complicati­ng the MPC’S efforts to implement counter-cyclical policy”, Ghate said. He was also worried that the inflation expectatio­ns were firming up after falling for several quarters.

While the monetary policy “cannot be a permanent form of stimulus”, Ghate said the corporatio­n tax rate cuts will have a minor impact on the fiscal deficit.

Pami Dua, another external member, expressed concerns on the private consumptio­n and investment activity remaining weak, while the business and consumer sentiment was downbeat. Dua favoured a 25basis-point rate cut, given the growth slowdown and benign inflation.

External member Ravindra Dholakia was the only one who wanted a 40-basis-point cut, as it was necessary to act “more aggressive­ly so as to correct the real interest rates in the economy in due course”.

The sharp cut proposed by him would “still leave some space for the rate action if required in future”, Dholakia said.

He also harped on the need for corporate bond market reforms by SHAKTIKANT­A DAS RBI governor

allowing entry to corporatio­ns with lower rating than AAA, encouragin­g issuance of long-term bonds and creating a proper yield curve for the government bond market to serve as a benchmark. This, he argued, would deepen the market and improve the transmissi­on.

Michael Patra, executive director of the RBI, said: “In this challengin­g environmen­t, my call would be for prudence rather than being datadepend­ent.”

“In its counter-cyclical role, monetary policy has to be pre-emptive in addressing the negative gaps — inflation below target, and output below potential — that seem to be developing some persistenc­e. Available space for policy action has to be calibrated to secure the closure of the gaps,” Patra said, advocating a 25-basis-point cut.

According to B P Kanungo, executive director in charge of the monetary policy, gross domestic product growth at 5 per cent for the first quarter of 2019-20 “was a surprise as it significan­tly undershot the Reserve Bank’s projection of 5.8 per cent”.

“This is particular­ly a cause of concern because it was caused by a sharp slowdown in private consumptio­n expenditur­e. Investment activity remained weak, and exports contracted reflecting weak global demand,” Kanungo said.

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 ??  ?? “Overall, domestic demand has moderated significan­tly. The weakening of private consumptio­n, which for long has been the bedrock of aggregate demand, in particular, is a matter of concern,”
“Overall, domestic demand has moderated significan­tly. The weakening of private consumptio­n, which for long has been the bedrock of aggregate demand, in particular, is a matter of concern,”

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