Deccan Chronicle

Economists see RBI dialling down the pace of rate hikes Soft landing for India means fast growth

- ANUP ROY & MICHELLE JAMRISKO

India's central bank, which last month vowed to do "whatever it takes" to fight inflation, is expected to refocus efforts toward its own version of a soft landing where it tackles price gains while trying to ensure growth remains among the world's fastest.

Economists see Reserve Bank of India governor Shaktikant­a Das and his monetary policy panel colleagues to begin dialling down the pace of interest-rate hikes this month after data showed a weaker-than-expected recovery last quarter.

Gross domestic product expansion of 13.5 per cent in the April-june period was below the RBI'S 16.2 per cent estimate, a red flag for policy makers who have been consistent in their messaging about the need to preserve growth.

"I see a soft landing as a trajectory of policy rates that minimises the growth sacrifice," said Jayanth Rama Varma, a member of the RBI'S ratesettin­g panel.

Varma, a monetary policy hawk, had voted in favour of a half-point hike at the August meeting when Das pledged to return inflation to its target of 2 per cent to 6 per cent from around 7 per cent.

Economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc have already lowered the growth forecast for India to 7 per cent from 7.2 per cent, while Citigroup Inc cut it more sharply to 6.7 per cent . The country, which last year was the world's fastest growing major economy, is poised to lose that spot to Saudi Arabia this year, according to Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projection­s in July.

Deutsche Bank AG sees the RBI, which delivered 140 basis points of hikes since May including two half-point increments, now slowing rate hikes to quarter-point adjustment­s from here on.

After a couple of more increases, India could be reaching the end of a ratehike cycle, said Arup Raha, chief economist for Asia-pacific with Oxford Economics.

"There are lots of uncertaint­ies for policy makers to consider," he said. "If they're going to err, they're better off trying to promote growth as long as inflationa­ry expectatio­ns remain anchored."

Beyond rates, the RBI has been stepping in to protect the rupee after it breached 80 to a dollar levels a few times, which in turn helps check imported inflation. Those interventi­ons have made the Indian currency one of Asia's most resilient so far this year.

Elsewhere in the region, the Malaysian ringgit and the Philippine peso have declined to multi-year lows amid dollar strength on expectatio­ns the US Federal Reserve will press ahead with large hikes to tame inflation. That is likely to force monetary authoritie­s, including Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, to closely watch the Fed's actions.

For India, the dynamics are significan­tly different.

"India doesn't need to keep pace with the US Fed," said Sonal Varma, an economist with Nomura Holdings Inc.

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