HomeNewsOpinionHigh levels of uncertainties add to stagflation risks

High levels of uncertainties add to stagflation risks

To avoid hurting private consumption and stagflation forces building, the government will have to intervene effectively to restrain food, fuel, and fertiliser prices 

March 21, 2022 / 14:44 IST
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A spate of sudden risk events has lifted uncertainty to extreme highs. Supply shocks and inflation risks originating from the Russia-Ukraine war and related developments have radically turned around the outlook from what it was in February. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) then believed that inflation would decline after its January peak while recovery progresses. But skyrocketing crude oil prices amidst elevated uncertainties have upset the math. Stagflation risks have grown.

Acknowledging the fresh developments, the central bank recently communicated its assessment of their effects upon the economy. It also shared its views on the new balance of risks which, it said, prompts re-evaluating the inflation (4.5 percent) and growth (7.8 percent) forecasts for FY23 next month. It further clarified its reaction function, saying the oil price shock will be considered a supply shock for policy purposes.

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The communication is important because in a highly-uncertain environment, it helps agents decide how to act. It also serves to influence future expectations. It imparts confidence by reassuring the macroeconomic fundamentals and policies are in control. Escalated uncertainties and shooting crude oil prices had increased risk aversion, accelerating outflow of foreign capital from domestic markets along with revisions of inflation, growth, and current account forecasts.

Supply shocks, which move output and prices in opposite directions (unlike aggregate demand shocks that move the two in the same direction), create a trade-off between the two, forcing a choice upon central bankers. The trade-off is more difficult when recovery is still not secured, as the case is at present. The RBI’s communication implies that the monetary policy will remain supportive (continuation of the accommodative stance) while the supply shock price pressures will more be managed through government interventions.