Subbarao Stuns
Subbarao Stuns
Subbarao Stuns
Economists now believe that rate cuts would come in smaller doses. We maintain our call that the room for monetary policy easing is limited and currently only see scope for up to 50 basis points in rate cuts this fiscal year, observed Leif Eskesen, chief economist, India and ASEAN, HSBC. The RBI has stated that the role of interest rates is small and it feels a reduction in rates could exacerbate inflationary pressures. Our rate call of 50-75 bps rests on government policy action, said Rohini Malkani, economist at Citigroup. The central banks wait-and-watch approach seems to have been appreciated by the government. C Rangarajan, chairman of the Prime Minister's economic advisory council observed that while slowing growth was a valid concern, the RBI did shoulder the responsibility of reining in inflation. So, the right time to look a policy change will be six weeks from now when we have more numbers, Rangarajan said. Indeed, the RBI seems determined to stay with a dear money policy until the government becomes serious about curtailing demand. The central bank pointed out that it had cut the policy rate by 50 basis points on April 17, hoping the process of fiscal consolidation critical for inflation management would get under way, along with other supply-side initiatives. Without mincing words, the RBI held the government responsible for distorting price signals and preventing the much-needed adjustment in aggregate demand for petroleum products by not passing on the higher cost of crude oil price to consumers. It went so far as to say that the huge subsidy burden was crowding out public investment at time when reviving investment, both public and private, is a critical imperative. As Jahangir Aziz, economist at JPMorgan has been pointing out for some time now, the sharp depreciation in the currency of close to 24% over the past year itself has provided a monetary stimulus. The central bank, for its part, pointed out that that the weakening currency had made domestic producers more competitive vis-a-vis foreign producers.