Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

RBI holds rates but inflation forecast up

- Roshan Kishore and Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) reiterated its commitment to reviving sustainabl­e economic growth even as it raised the inflation projection for the current fiscal year to 5.7%, an increase of 60 basis points – one basis point is one hundredth of a percentage point – compared to the projection in its June meeting.

There is no doubt about what RBI thinks is more important at this point in time; RBI governor Shaktikant­a Das (he quoted Martin Luther King Jr in his comments) termed inflationa­ry pressures “transitory”, and “driven by adverse supply side factors” and was unequivoca­l that “at this stage... continued policy support from all aides -fiscal, monetary, and sectoral -is required the nurture the nascent and hesitant recovery.”

And the policy rate (at 4%) and monetary policy stance have been kept unchanged at 4% and accommodat­ive.

The message is clear: RBI thinks growth is a concern, not inflation. It is not an assessment with which all analysts agree , not least because inflation has been stubborn.

The MPC resolution also put the onus of bringing down petrol-diesel prices on the union and state government­s through tax reduction. While it has retained its 2021-22 GDP growth forecast of 9.5%, it has underlined demand side headwinds to the ongoing economic recovery. Experts have highlighte­d two facts -- a difference of views within MPC on the question of retaining the accommodat­ive policy stance and the central bank announcing additional variable rate reverse repo auctions (which will take back

some of the excess liquidity in the system) -- to argue that the monetary policy will see a gradual normalisat­ion of policy setting and perhaps move in sync with the country’s vaccinatio­n programme.

RBI will “continue with the accommodat­ive stance as long as necessary to revive and sustain growth on a durable basis and continue to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the economy”, the MPC resolution after its three-day meeting from August 4-6 said. The focus on prioritisi­ng the ongoing economic recovery despite high inflation was justified on the grounds of achieving a gradual reduction in inflation. “The approach to inflation is not a cold turkey method, where you slam the economy until it goes limp,” RBI deputy governor Michael Patra said.

“It is important to bring that down over time and not immediatel­y.”

Patra’s remarks are in line with the MPC’s inflation prognosis. “The current assessment is that the inflationa­ry pressures during Q1:2021-22 are largely driven by adverse supply shocks which are expected to be transitory”, the MPC resolution said.

The emphasis on protecting the economy makes sense when read with the MPS’s assessment of the economy.

“The outlook for aggregate demand is improving, but still weak and overcast by the pandemic. There is a large amount of slack in the economy, with output below its pre-pandemic level”, the resolution said. While the MPC has increased its forecast for GDP growth in the June 2021 quarter from 18.5% to 21.4%, growth forecasts for the next three quarters of the current fiscal year have seen a downward revision this time. This suggests a weakeness in demand going forward.

The MPC’s projection­s are in line with the trend seen in high frequency indicators in the month of July.

While Purchasing Mangers’ Index (PMI) for manufactur­ing showed an impressive jump to 55.3 from 48.1 in June, PMI services remained below the critical threshold of 50 values above which signify an expansion in economic activity compared to last month.

The Nomura India Business Resumption Index has also shown a marginal fall in the last two weeks; from 96.4 in the week ending July 18 to 95 in the week ending August 1.

“We think there are some good reasons why RBI should begin to plan a gradual exit (from loose monetary policy). Inflation has been higher than 4% for 21 months and is likely to remain so over the foreseeabl­e future. And monetary policy has its limits in driving growth. It is a countercyc­lical tool and can help close the output gap, but not drive potential growth”, Pranjul Bhandari, Chief India Economist at HSBC Securities and Capital Markets said in a note.

“Deputy Governor’s comments on growth and inflation indicate that RBI would be patient in withdrawin­g accommodat­ion. Next steps in the gradual normalizat­ion in October could be further increase in the VRR volume and reduction in 3Q GSAP but a reverse repo hike could be delayed”, Samiran Chakrabort­y, Chief India Economist at Citi Research said in a note.

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