HomeNewsOpinionBudget’s approach will impinge on the fiscal-monetary tango

Budget’s approach will impinge on the fiscal-monetary tango

There was a de facto monetary easing between April and January, with term premium sliding to a decade low. However, at present interest rate have hardened and credit offtake has slowed down. In this scenario, if budget proposals lead to lower net market borrowings, it will open up space for more monetary easing

January 29, 2025 / 13:36 IST
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economy
The budget can nudge growth through higher government spending.

India’s bond market awaits another annual government borrowing programme even as it keeps eyes peeled on the turn in the monetary policy cycle. The dynamics here will have a bearing on the interest rates next fiscal. As for long-term rates, underscored by the benchmark 10-year government security (G-sec) yield, other macro factors will also matter.

Long-term rates ease in FY25

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This fiscal, between April and January, the 10-year yield has slipped to an average of 6.9 percent, compared with 7.2 percent average in full fiscal 2024.

With the repo rate unchanged at 6.5 percent, the term premium, or the spread between the G-sec yield and repo, fell to an average of 40 basis points (bps) for the fiscal so far, the lowest in over a decade.