HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceWhy RBI will not be in a hurry to normalise policy rates

Why RBI will not be in a hurry to normalise policy rates

While several developed market economies have come out of slump and have started growing, India’s economy will need longer to heal its scars.

August 25, 2021 / 09:11 IST
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The unexpected jump in May and June headline consumer price index-based inflation (CPI) has turned the focus on Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) potential measures to contain rising price pressures before they become well entrenched.

India’s CPI had averaged ~6.2% in FY21. RBI has raised its FY22 average CPI forecast from 5% in April to 5.7% in August MPC. If this fructifies, then the Indian economy will have endured two consecutive years of inflation averaging 6%, very close to RBI’s higher threshold.

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While the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) could attribute the bulk of an increase in Headline CPI to the pandemic, resultant supply-side constraints, and an upsurge in global commodities, sticky and upward trending core inflation (CPI ex-food & fuel) has caused concerns among policymakers.

Higher core inflation, quick resumption of business activities, and FOMC’s decision of earlier-than-expected rate lift-off by mid-2023 have raised hackles among a section of global bond market participants and have raised clamor of quicker “normalisation” of policy rates before the Fed starts.