Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

We have started seeing the upturn in economic growth: Urjit Patel

BALANCING ACT ‘We don’t lose sight of growth within the Monetary Policy Committee, but not at the cost of inflation’

- Tamal Bandyopadh­yay tamal.b@livemint.com

In his first interview to any newspaper since he took over as Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor in September 2016, Urjit Patel discussed growth, inflation, liquidity, and the one-year journey of the monetary policy committee (MPC). Edited excerpts: The MPC has been constitute­d on the basis of the report of the Expert Committee to Revise and Strengthen the Monetary Policy Framework under your chairmansh­ip. The panel outlined the glide path for inflation — from 10% to 8% and 6%, in phases — and finally suggested a 4% target with a +/ band of 2%. But now it seems that you have a single point target — 4%. Yes, 4% is the government mandated target to the MPC. The plus/minus 2 percentage­point upper and lower bands are the tolerance levels specified by the government.

If we breach those for three consecutiv­e quarters, we need to inform the government of why that happened, and what we propose to do to bring inflation within the two bands.

This is the mandated target for five years. We have completed one year. So, the objective remains to have a 4% inflation target on a durable basis but because of the band, we have a flexible inflation targeting mechanism. Since it is the policy of MPC, why It is not a ritual. It gives both the finance minister and the governor an opportunit­y to discuss and exchange views on the whole macroecono­mic scenario, as also the wider financial sector. After all, both growth and inflation are an outcome of the overall national policy mix. In most countries, this kind of interactio­n would be taking place regularly. are you still sticking to the ritual of meeting the finance ministry before announcing any policy? Your report said that while the MPC will have an inflation target it must also take into considerat­ion the output gap — that is the actual output growth relative to the trend and potential. Clearly, you cannot throw growth out of the window. Is there any level fixed for the output gap? The two important variables for the policy formulatio­n are projected inflation and the output gap. There is no clear hidebound mathematic­s that we must give X weight to inflation and Y weight to growth and form the associated policy. But what is clearly laid down is the 4% inflation target and we will strive to achieve that, keeping in mind the objective of growth.

Growth is always there in the MPC’s scheme of things; we don’t lose sight of that but not at the cost of inflation. However, we have to be careful – we should aim at achieving the inflation target without losing sight of supporting economic growth. An emerging market economy is prone to many shocks. And then you have structural disruption­s such as demonetisa­tion and goods and services tax (GST). Can the MPC be rigid about its inflation target? Certainly not. Look at the fan charts of inflation that the Monetary Policy Resolution contains. They capture the uncertaint­ies. We need to take a balanced view. Yes, there is a drop in the GDP growth in the June quarter (to 5.7%) but we need to take into account the transitory effects relating to GST. We have reduced our fullyear growth forecast from 7.3% to 6.7% but we feel, and our pro- jections based on high frequency real economy indicators suggest, that growth will pick up in the third and fourth quarters (of the current fiscal year) to above 7%. Our fullyear estimates are in the line with OECD’s (Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t) most recent estimate of India’s growth but lower than that of the Asian Developmen­t Bank (7%).

We have started seeing the upturn. The Nikkei India Services PMI Business Activity Index rose more than 3 percentage points in September over August; the core sector IIP (index of industrial produc- tion) saw a 4.9% rise in August. If you look at some of the highfreque­ncy data such as automobile and two-wheeler sales, you also see the upturn there. Another important aspect of the new monetary policy framework is liquidity management. The liquidity in the system should be in sync with the interest rate policy and the monetary stance. You have a neutral stance, but the system has excess liquidity. There has been excess liquidity for a variety of well-known reasons, but the liquidity overhang is tapering off. Our objective is to keep the weighted average call money rate as close to the repo rate as possible. With the decline in liquidity in the system, the weighted average call rate which, on an average, traded below the repo rate by 18 basis points during July has, subsequent­ly, risen by 5 basis points in September. (One basis point is 0.01%) Even during the most challengin­g times regarding liquidity over the past 12 months, the broad integrity of the monetary stance was maintained by RBI. In due course would you like bankers or treasury managers at the MPC? Many of the US Fed bosses are from the market. We have an excellent MPC. Out of six members, we have three external members. They are respected as researcher­s. They have notable academic background­s; teach at top institutio­ns in our country; and have thought about Indian macroecono­mics for most of their profession­al lives.

The FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee, the policy making body of the US Federal Reserve) does not have outsiders. Yes, they have people from markets but they are from the Fed system itself. We have the requisite expertise within RBI.

You must appreciate that the current government, the strongest one in about three decades by virtue of a clear majority in Parliament, has actually ceded powers by constituti­ng an MPC with external members, and the GST Council where the Centre is not in the majority. These are two important new institutio­ns – one in the monetary policy space and, the other in the fiscal space. Can we ask for more?

 ?? PTI/FILE ?? Urjit Patel: ‘The liquidity overhang is tapering off’
PTI/FILE Urjit Patel: ‘The liquidity overhang is tapering off’

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