Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Inflation at 17-mth low may prompt RBI to slash rates

- Asit Ranjan Mishra asit.m@livemint.com ▪

NEWDELHI: India’s retail inflation dropped to a 17-month low in November, while factory output grew to an 11-month high on the back of a lower base, conditions that allow for a potential rate cut in the first policy meeting under new Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Shaktikant­a Das.

Retail inflation slowed down to 2.33% in November, below the central bank’s projection, from 3.38% a month ago, according to data released by the Central Statistics Office. Factory output measured by the index of industrial production (IIP) grew at a faster clip at 8.1% in October, compared with 4.5% in the previous month.

Urjit Patel in his last monetary policy committee (MPC) meeting on December 5, before resigning on Monday as RBI governor, kept policy rates unchanged and cut the inflation forecast for the rest of the fiscal, citing a sharp fall in crude oil prices and food “deflation”.

With crude oil prices falling more than 30% from recent highs and an impending global slowdown and higher oil production in the US, analysts expect the upside to oil price rises to have been capped. Overproduc­tion in farm output has led to a glut and farmers’ distress, with vegetable deflation hitting 15.6% in November and two consecutiv­e months of overall food deflation.

MPC earlier this month slashed its inflation projection from 3.9-4.5% to 2.7-3.2% for the second half of the current fiscal. It expects inflation to quicken to 3.8-4.2% in the first half of the following year.

However, MPC retained the gross domestic product (GDP) forecast for the current year at 7.4%, with “risks somewhat to the downside”, possibly to account for the credit squeeze and demand weakness.

Das, who took charge on Wednesday, said at his first press conference that inflation remained within the central bank’s target and its outlook was benign. “But we need to be watchful,” he said, ahead of the next policy meeting in February.

The sharp easing in the headline consumer price index (CPI)-based inflation reflects a combinatio­n of favourable factors such as correction in retail fuel prices, discomfiti­ng factors such as a deeper disinflati­on in food prices and base effects related to the waning impact of the house rent allowance revision for central government employees, said Aditi Nayar, principal economist at Icra Ltd.

“While it is too early to assess whether a rate cut would be forthcomin­g in the February 2019 MPC review, there is a significan­t likelihood of a change in the monetary policy stance back to neutral from calibrated tightening. This is likely to serve as a precursor to a repo rate cut in the first quarter of 2019-20, if inflationa­ry risks remain in check,” she said.

Capital goods, which indicate investment demand in the economy, shot up 16.8% in October, continuing to signal a revival in investment activity after GDP data last month showed gross fixed capital formation accelerati­ng to 12.5% in the second quarter.

Ranen Banerjee, leader, public finance and economics at PwC India, said the boost in IIP came from the infrastruc­ture sector, benefiting from the government­led spending.

“We hope private sector investment­s will pick up soon, else the burden on the government and the risk of fiscal slippages will be higher,” he said.

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