The Free Press Journal

Growth momentum needs to be strengthen­ed: MPC minutes

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NEW DELHI: The growth momentum needs to be strengthen­ed for a sustained revival of the economy and quick return to the pre-COVID trajectory, opined RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das while pitching for a status quo on rates at the last meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).

All the six members of the MPC had voted for keeping the policy repo rate unchanged at 4 per cent at the threeday meeting which began on February 3, citing similar reasons.

Das, according to the minutes of the meeting released by RBI on Monday, had said: "Growth, although uneven, is recovering and gathering momentum, and the outlook has improved significan­tly with the rollout of the vaccine programme in the country." "The growth momentum, however, needs to strengthen further for a sustained revival of the economy and for a quick return of the level of output to the preCOVID trajectory," he added.

Given the sharp moderation in inflation along with a stable near-term outlook, he said, the monetary policy needs to continue with the accommodat­ive stance to ensure that the recovery gains greater traction and becomes broad-based.

The RBI kept the policy rate unchanged for the third time in a row in its last monetary policy review for 2020-21 on February 5.

The MPC, headed by the RBI Governor, also decided to continue with the accommodat­ive stance as long as necessary. The RBI has been set a medium term target to keep retail inflation at 4 per cent with a bias of +/- 2 per cent on the either side.

The other members of the committee are Shashanka Bhide, Senior Advisor, National Council of Applied Economic Research, Delhi; Ashima Goyal, Professor, Indira Gandhi Institute of Developmen­t Research, Mumbai; Jayanth R Varma, Professor, IIMAhmedab­ad; Mridul K Saggar, Executive Director, RBI; and Michael Debabrata Patra, Deputy Governor in charge of monetary policy. Bhide, in his statement, said the MPC is committed to continuing with the accommodat­ive stance as long as necessary -at least during the current financial year and into the next fiscal.

He said the stance is in consonance to revive growth on a durable basis and mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the economy, while ensuring that inflation remains within the target going forward.

"The current macroecono­mic configurat­ion and its expected future evolution as outlined above implies there is space for the MPC to continue to support the revival of the economy with inflation remaining in the target band. Therefore, I vote to maintain the status quo in policy rate and stance," he said.

Varma said these decisions are consistent with the forward guidance provided by the MPC in its last two meetings (October and December 2020). "With both inflation and growth outcomes being well within the range of expectatio­ns of the MPC, and short term interest rates being within the corridor...The MPC must of course continue to be data driven and must continue to monitor future developmen­ts carefully," he added.

Patra said overall, the near-term outlook for inflation appears less risky than the near-term challenges for growth which warrant continuing policy support, at least until the elusive engine of investment fires and consumptio­n, the mainstay of aggregate demand in India, stabilises.

Saggar said the MPC's call to hold policy rates despite inflation staying elevated above the upper tolerance level during H2 of 2020 was based on the assessment that inflation will recede going forward.

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