![]() Of Govt ordinance, RBI and SLRPublished on Wed, Jan 17, 2007 at 08:12 | Source : Moneycontrol.com Updated at Wed, Jan 17, 2007 at 08:59
Rumours started swirling around about a fortnight back. They became fact late last week when the Government issued an ordinance enabling the Reserve Bank of India to vary the Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) - the proportion of deposits that banks must invest in sovereign bonds - depending on its assessment of financial conditions from time to time.
Drops a hint Giving the RBI the freedom to change the SLR is a none too subtle hint from the Government to cut it so that banks can swap (obligatory) investments for credit to meet the needs of the rapidly-growing economy. That precisely is the point, says the central bank - we are running into capacity constraints and credit expansion will only stoke inflation. Should monetary policy, in these circumstances, be accommodative? It is now clear that increasing interest rates in baby steps has no effect. What matters in the ultimate analysis is system liquidity. This became obvious in the aftermath of the mid-term review of monetary policy when markets greeted the repo rate hike with a yawn and drove down money rates and bond yields, but sat up when the CRR rose 50bps. Reaction was swift. The cost of overnight borrowing jumped and bond prices dropped - precisely what the RBI wanted. It is difficult to think of a more effective (and blunter) instrument. Contd. on page 2 ...........
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