The Free Press Journal

RBI is expected to keep lending rates unchanged

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is expected to maintain its key lending rates at its first bi-monthly monetary policy review of this fiscal due on Thursday. At its last policy review of the previous fiscal in February, the RBI had kept its repo or short-term lending rate for banks unchanged at 6.25 per cent, saying it awaits more data on inflation trends and the impact of demonetisa­tion on economic growth.

At the February review, India's central bank also shifted its monetary policy stance from accommodat­ive to neutral citing inflationa­ry fears and global uncertaint­ies. "We are maintainin­g status quo on repo rate in April policy," said a state-run State Bank of India report authored by Chief Economic Adviser Soumya Kanti Ghosh.

"In the post demonetisa­tion period, aggregate deposits have increased by Rs 4.27 lakh crore. Our estimates now indicate there would be a permanent liquidity injection of least Rs 1.7 lakh crore or 1.1 per cent of GDP," Ghosh said. "Hence, it is now important to innovate a mechanism to manage such liquidity. We strongly recommend the RBI avoid disruptive modes of liquidity absorption like CRR (cash reserve ratio) hike," he said, reports IANS.

Expectatio­ns that the RBI will maintain status quo on rates has been fuelled by inflation numbers, with wholesale inflation soaring to over a three-year high of 6.55 per cent in February while retail inflation climbed to 3.65 per cent due to rise in food and fuel prices.

Noting that excluding food and fuel, inflation has been unyielding at 4.9 per cent since September 2016, the RBI said: "The committee is of the view that the persistenc­e of inflation excluding food and fuel could set a floor on further downward movements in headline inflation and trigger second-order effects.

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