Business Standard

INFLATION TRAJECTORY DIPPING FASTER THAN ANTICIPATE­D, SAYS RBI

Glide path should take rate down to 5.7% in FY22 and closer to 4% by FY24: Michael Patra

- SUBRATA PANDA

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said the inflation trajectory was coming down faster than anticipate­d and the rate of 5.3 per cent in August had proven the monetary policy committee’s move to look through May’s price shock as the right approach. The August consumer price index inflation print was at 5.3 per cent, lower than the RBI’S prediction.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said the inflation trajectory was coming down faster than anticipate­d and the rate of 5.3 per cent in August has proven the monetary policy committee’s (MPC’S) move to look through May’s price shock as the right approach.

The August consumer price index (CPI) inflation print was at 5.3 per cent, lower than what the RBI had predicted. The central bank had expected inflation at 5.9 per cent for the second quarter ended September, and 5.3 per cent for the third quarter ended December.

In the September bulletin, the RBI has said the softening prices of various food items was likely to extend into Q3, which will, in effect, contain the upward pressure from fuel and core prices on headline inflation. “The task now is to consolidat­e these gains and carry them forward into Q4 as well,” the RBI said.

RBI Deputy Governor Michael Debabrata Patra said data arrivals vindicate the MPC’S stance as inflation has moderated into the tolerance band, and growth in the first quarter is in almost perfect alignment with the RBI’S forecast. The RBI sees the economy as on track to achieve its projected growth rate of 9.5 per cent in the current financial year. Now, the MPC will follow a glide path that will eventually bring down inflation to closer to 4 per cent by 202324, which is the mandate given to the MPC. Given the pandemic, the MPC had to tolerate a higher average inflation rate of 6.2 per cent in 2020-21, but the glide path envisaged by the committee should ensure that inflation rate falls to 5.7 per cent in 2021-22 and below 5 per cent in 2022-23.

Speaking at a CII event, Patra said, “Taking into account the outlook on growth and inflation and keeping in mind the inherent output costs of disinflati­on, it is pragmatic to envisage a glide path that the MPC can steer the path of inflation into the future.”

According to the MPC’S assessment, Patra said inflationa­ry pressures are largely driven by supply shocks, which are supposed to be transitory in nature. But, the repeated insistence of shocks is giving inflation a persistent character.

The deputy governor explained that only items constituti­ng 20 per cent of the CPI are responsibl­e for more than 50 per cent of inflation.

Patra also weighed in on the debate that has ensued, wherein many commentato­rs have said that the reverse repo rate has become the effective rate now, which, in a way, is underminin­g the MPC. Because under conditions of ample liquidity, the RBI has to switch to an absorption mode and the effective policy rate becomes the reverse repo rate.

Patra said the pandemic has called for out-of-the-box responses by the RBI, given that the credit channel of transmissi­on broke down because of muted demand and risk aversion. Hence, the RBI decided to operate through other segments of the financial markets to keep the lifeblood of finance flowing. He further said at a time when the repo rate has been reduced by 250 basis points since February 2019 and there is hardly any room left to reduce it further, given the inflation print, the reduction in reverse repo rate eased financial conditions so much that it facilitate­d record levels of access to finance by corporates and government­s at low-interest rates/spreads.

But, when normalcy returns, they will resort to normal liquidity management operations and a regular and symmetric

Michael Debabrata Patra

Deputy Governor, RBI

“WE DON’T LIKE TANTRUMS; WE LIKE TEPID AND TRANSPAREN­T TRANSITION­S — GLIDEPATHS RATHER THAN CRASH LANDINGS”

(liquidity adjustment facility) LAF corridor.

Jayanth R Varma, the lone dissenting member of the MPC, had argued that the reverse repo rate does not fall within the remit of the MPC, then the announceme­nt of this rate should be in the governor’s statement and not in the MPC’S statement. Varma had voted in favour of a raise in the reverse repo rate, minutes of the August 4-6 meetings showed. Patra said, the RBI will remain in surplus mode and the liquidity management framework will continue in absorption mode.

“..it (VRRRS) is not a signal either for withdrawal of liquidity or of lift-off of interest rates. Signals of the latter will be conveyed through the stance that is articulate­d by the MPC in its future resolution­s. We don’t like tantrums; we like tepid and transparen­t transition­s — glide paths rather than crash landings,” he said. “It is our hope that credit demand will recover and banks will get back to their core function of financial intermedia­tion as soon as they can. This is the natural and the Rbi-preferred manner in which surpluses in the LAF can be reduced,” he said.

At the end of September up to which VRRRS auctions have been announced, the daily surplus absorbed under the LAF will still be around ~9 trillion — the same level as today — if not higher, more than half of which would still be under the fixed-rate reverse repo, Patra said.

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