The Hindu (Erode)

Towards green growth

The RBI must assess the impact of climate change on economic stability

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Anotable feature of the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) latest Monetary Policy Report (included in its April Bulletin) is the primacy given to “extreme weather events” and “climate shocks” aœecting not only food inžation but also likely having a broader impact on the natural rate of interest, thereby inžuencing the economy’s ‘nancial stability. Natural, or neutral, rate of interest refers to the central bank’s monetary policy lever, which allows it to maintain maximum economic output, while keeping a check on inžation. The report mentions a “New-Keynesian model that incorporat­es a physical climate risk damage function” being used to estimate the “counterfac­tual macroecono­mic impact of climate change vis-à-vis a no climate change scenario”. The report’s authors go on to warn that the “long-term (economic) output” could be lower by around 9% by 2050 in the absence of any climate mitigation policies. They ominously add that ‘if inžation hysteresis gets entrenched, it may lead to a de-anchoring of inžation expectatio­ns, and the underminin­g of the central bank’s credibilit­y would warrant higher interest rates to curb inžation, leading to greater output loss’.

Beginning with its July 2022 discussion paper on ‘climate risk and sustainabl­e ‘nance’, the RBI has made incrementa­l progress to address the transition to a green economy, even while admitting that India requires over $17 trillion to achieve its net zero ambitions by 2070. Its peers in advanced economies, most notably the European Central Bank, have aided the formulatio­n of a green taxonomy for the entire Eurozone’s economic value chain. A green taxonomy is a framework to assess the sustainabi­lity credential­s and possible ranking of an economic activity. The RBI and the Finance Ministry could take inspiratio­n from the developing world, especially the ASEAN region, where a layered green taxonomy as a living document keeps getting updated with sectoral views of possible sustainabl­e trajectori­es. While the issuance of ₹16,000 crore worth of Sovereign Green Bonds and expanding the resource pool by allowing Foreign Institutio­nal Investors to participat­e in future green government securities are welcome steps, the RBI must undertake a thorough-going assessment on the quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e impact on economic and ‘nancial stability due to climate change. It must encourage administra­tive consultati­on to begin populating a layered green taxonomy that is režective of India’s fragmented developmen­tal trajectori­es. The eœort should be to mitigate the transition­al risks to the ‘nancial system as the economy moves towards a sustainabl­e future.

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