‘Repo Rate Unchanged at 6.50%, Committed to Limit Inflation at 4%’: RBI Gov

The RBI has projected India’s Q2 retail inflation at 6.2%; Q3 at 5.7% and Q4 at 5.2% in the current fiscal year.

New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday left the repo rate unchanged at 6.50%, the Indian Express reported. The key policy rate has remained unchanged for three cycles.

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said that the six-member monetary policy committee (MPC) unanimously decided to keep the lending rate at 6.50%. The MPC also retained its withdrawal of accommodation stance to ensure that the retail inflation remains within the targeted 4%. Withdrawal of accommodative stance means reducing the money supply in the system to rein in inflation.

Earlier, the central bank’s policy committee had hiked the repo rate by 250 basis points from May 2022 to February 2023. Das said that the headline inflation after reaching a low of 4.3% in May 2023, rose in June and is expected to surge during July and August, owing to the rise in vegetable prices, the Indian Express reported.

The RBI has projected India’s Q2 retail inflation at 6.2%; Q3 at 5.7% and Q4 at 5.2% in the current fiscal year, the report said.

Das said that the consumer price index (CPI) inflation forecast for FY2023-24 has been raised to 5.4% from 5.1% due to the rise in vegetable prices, while the gross domestic product (GDP) forecast has been retained at 6.5%, with risks evenly balanced.

“While the vegetable price shock may reverse quickly, possible El Nino weather conditions, along with global food prices need to be watched closely, against the backdrop of a skewed Southwest Monsoon,” Das was quoted by the paper as saying.

“These developments warrant a heightened vigil on the evolving inflation trajectory,” Das cautioned.

“The cumulative rate hike of 250 basis points, undertaken by the MPC so far, is working its way into the economy. Nevertheless, domestic economic activity is holding up well, and is likely to retain its momentum, despite, weak external demand. Considering this confluence of factors, the MPC decided to remain watchful and evaluate the emerging situation,”

Das reaffirmed that the MPC is resolute in its commitment to “align inflation to the 4% target” and “anchoring inflation expectations”.

The RBI also asked banks to set aside a larger part of incremental deposits to tighten liquidity. With effect from the August 12 fortnight, banks shall maintain an incremental cash reserve ratio of 10% on increase in deposits between May 19 and July 28, Das said.

RBI Hikes Lending Rate by 35 Basis Points, Cuts FY23 GDP Growth Projection to 6.8%

Even as the central bank called the Indian economy a “bright spot in the otherwise gloomy world”, it lowered its estimate of GDP growth to 6.8% in the fiscal ending March 31, 2023, from an earlier forecast of 7%.

New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Wednesday raised the benchmark lending rate by 35 basis points (bps) – the fifth increase since May – saying it remains focused on bringing down the inflation to a tolerable limit.

Even as the central bank called the Indian economy a “bright spot in the otherwise gloomy world”, it lowered its estimate of GDP growth to 6.8% in the fiscal ending March 31, 2023, from an earlier forecast of 7%.

It, however, kept the inflation forecast unchanged at 6.7% for the current fiscal and projected it to come down below the upper tolerance limit of 6% in the fourth quarter of the current financial year.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) based inflation, which RBI factors in while fixing its benchmark rate, stood at 6.7% in October. Retail inflation has been ruling above the RBI’s comfort level of 6% since January this year.

RBI governor Shaktikanta Das said the central bank remains “nimble and flexible” in its approach to dealing with the price situation.

The six-member monetary policy committee (MPC) headed by RBI Governor raised the key lending rate or the repo rate by 35 basis points to 6.25%.

With the latest hike, the repo rate or the short-term lending rate at which banks borrow from the central bank has now crossed 6%.

This is the fifth consecutive rate hike after a 40 basis points increase in May and 50 basis points hike each in June, August and September. In all, the RBI has raised the benchmark rate by 2.25% since May this year.

Consequently, the standing deposit facility (SDF) rate is adjusted to 6% and the marginal standing facility (MSF) rate and Bank rate to 6.50%.

The MPC also decided to remain focused on the withdrawal of the accommodative stance to ensure that inflation remains within the target going forward while supporting growth.

The panel also decided by a majority – 5 out of 6 members – voted to increase the policy repo rate by 35 basis points while Jayanth R. Varma voted against the hike.

Das also said the overall liquidity remains in surplus, with average daily absorption under the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) at Rs 1.4 lakh crore during October-November compared to Rs 2.2 lakh crore in August-September.

On the inflation outlook, the governor said it is expected to be at 6.7% for the current fiscal.

Concerning economic growth, the RBI has slashed its GDP forecast to 6.8 per cent from an earlier estimate of 7% for the current fiscal.

“Growth remains resilient in such a hostile environment… inflation in India is lower than other countries,” he said, adding even at the lower GDP growth rate, India will remain among the fastest-growing major economies.

In its last bi-monthly policy review released in September, the RBI had slashed the economic growth projection for the current financial year to 7% from 7.2% earlier on account of extended geopolitical tensions and aggressive monetary policy tightening globally.

Full Text: Pronab Sen on Why Q2 Growth Numbers Aren’t Cause for Celebration

EMIs to rise as consequences of repo rate increase

The RBI’s decision to hike the repo rate by 35 basis points will raise prospects of EMIs for home, auto and other loans rising further. The previous four increases totalled 190 bps, with the last three hikes being 50 bps each.

Announcing the monetary policy committee’s decisions, Das said the main risk is that inflation could remain sticky and elevated.

“The MPC was of the view that further calibrated monetary policy action was warranted to keep inflation expectations anchored, break core-inflation persistence and contain second-round effects,” he said.

Acuite Ratings and Research said the RBI’s stance has remained moderately hawkish, and there exists a possibility of a further round of rate hikes in February next year, with a potential terminal rate of 6.5% by the beginning of FY24.

The pass-through of higher rates to home loans may start to impact the demand for housing, particularly in the mid to high-ticket segment, it noted.

India posted a GDP growth of 6.3% in the July-September quarter, slightly better than expected but less than half the 13.5% growth in the previous three months.

“The focus on the inflation fight continues. There will be no let up in that,” Das said.

He said food inflation is likely to moderate with the usual winter softening and the likelihood of a bountiful rabi harvest, but pressure points remain in the form of prices of cereals, milk and spices in the near term.

For the Indian economy, Das said the outlook is supported by good progress of rabi sowing, sustained urban demand, improving rural demand, a pick-up in manufacturing, a rebound in services and robust credit expansion.

(With PTI inputs)

RBI May Opt For Term Repos Over Permanent Liquidity Infusion, Say Analysts

‘The RBI may look at conducting term repos and not opt for any permanent measure. They may not prefer doing outright open market purchases or cutting the cash reserve ratio,’ an analyst said.

Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India is unlikely to undertake any bond purchases or reduce the cash reserve ratio and may instead prefer to stick to term repo auctions to add funds to the country’s banking system, analysts said.

India’s banking system liquidity slipped into deficit for the second time in one week on Tuesday, September 27. It dipped into deficit for the first time in nearly 40 months last week.

“The RBI may look at conducting 14-day or 28-day term repos and not opt for any permanent measure. They may not prefer doing outright open market purchases or cutting the cash reserve ratio,” said Vijay Sharma, senior executive vice president at PNB Gilts.

“Some people are expecting OMOs (open market operations), but I do not endorse that view. For the next two to three months, they may stay with term repos.”

Market participants also expect liquidity to oscillate between surplus and deficit based on the extent of inflows from government spending.

The RBI conducted an overnight repo last week and infused Rs 50,000 crore ($6.11 billion) to help banks meet their funding needs, but has not intervened apart from that.

Traders will keep a close watch for any liquidity-focused commentary from the central bank at its monetary policy decision this Friday, September 30.

The RBI’s aim is to ensure that repo remains the operational rate through the weighted average call rate and liquidity will need to remain tight to sustain that, said Upasna Bhardwaj, chief economist at Kotak Mahindra Bank.

Also read: RBI May Need to Tap Old Ways to Boost Forex Reserves, Say Economists

“We do not see any scope for liquidity easing measures in the current environment. Instead, any frictional tightness should be addressed through more frequent-term repos.”

India’s weighted average call rate has stayed over 5.60% since the middle of September, while the RBI’s repo rate stands at 5.40%.

Apart from tax outflows, systemic liquidity has also come down drastically in the last few weeks due to the RBI’s increased intervention in the foreign exchange market to cap the slide in the local currency.

“At a time, when the currency is getting hammered and touching record lows, it will be very tough for the central bank to undertake any move which will increase rupee liquidity,” a trader with a bank said.

“In fact, the tightness could be a blessing in disguise for managing the rupee.”

The Indian rupee fell to record low of 81.9350 earlier this week and is expected to remain under pressure, like other currencies, given the strengthening dollar.

Some market participants also believe the RBI may cut down or even stop conducting long-term variable rate reverse repos.

The RBI currently withdraws money from the banking system through 14-day and 28-day variable rate reverse repos (VRRR) auctions of an aggregate of Rs 2.5 lakh crore.

“Currently, the stance of the policy is hawkish. Unless they turn neutral, it is difficult for them to start infusing permanent liquidity. They may also stay away from conducting large-scale reverse repos and may stop VRRR for some time,” said PNB Gilts’ Sharma.

(Reuters)

Wholesale Inflation Rate Eased in August as Prices of Commodities Fell

While falls in global crude oil and commodity prices have eased pressure on companies facing a rise in input costs, prices rose for a broad range of food items.

New Delhi: India’s wholesale price inflation slowed in August, helped by a fall in commodity prices, but double-digit price gains for the 17th month raise the chance for more rate hikes this month.

The wholesale price index climbed 12.41% in August from a year earlier, lower than a forecast of 13% in a Reuters poll, and compared with 13.93% the previous month.

While falls in global crude oil and commodity prices have eased pressure on companies facing a rise in input costs, prices rose for a broad range of food items – cereals and vegetables among them, data showed.

A near 7% depreciation of the rupee against the dollar this year has made imported inputs costlier for companies who have tried to pass higher prices on to consumers as the economic recovery gains momentum.

Wholesale food prices, contributing about a quarter of the WPI index, climbed 9.93% in August from 9.41% in July. Fruit prices jumped 31.75% and vegetable prices by 22.29% over the year, data showed.

The Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee has lifted the repo rate by 140 basis points since May, including by 50 bps last month. The government has also imposed export curbs on rice, wheat and sugar, and states stepped up other relief measures to manage inflation.

Also read: In Face of Rising Domestic Prices, India Restricts Rice Exports

The MPC holds its next monetary policy review on September 30 and is widely expected to raise the repo rate by 35-50 basis points due to stubbornly high inflation.

Retail inflation in August accelerated to 7% from a year earlier and will likely remain above the central bank’s tolerance band through this calendar year.

The pace of interest rate increases should be calibrated from here on to ensure economic recovery does not stall as the central bank tries to bring inflation within its tolerance band, Ashima Goyal, MPC member, told Reuters on Tuesday.

India’s economy grew 13.5% in the April-June quarter from a year earlier, slower than the RBI’s earlier estimate of 16.2%. The economy is expected to grow close to 7% in the current financial year ending in March 2023.

(Reuters)

India’s Economic Narrative Might Be Glowing. The Economy Isn’t.

The latest GDP figures are a window dressing under which the economy is unmistakably tottering and the growth trajectory since the pandemic has been ramshackle at best.

The latest, June quarter gross domestic product (GDP) figures for fiscal year (FY) 23 delivered some much-needed grist for the BJP’s spin mills. Prima facie, the numbers look impressive and, to nobody’s surprise, the party machinery is leaving no stone unturned in trumpeting the figures as evidence that the Modi government is indeed grafting together an impressive growth narrative for India. However, the catch here is that under the window dressing of the GDP figures, the economy is unmistakably tottering and the growth trajectory since the pandemic has been ramshackle at best.

Contrasted with the 16.2% growth rate projection given by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and a median projection of 15.2% by economists surveyed by Reuters, the latest quarter growth rate numbers surprised everyone by coming in lower at 13.5%. A real GDP growth rate of 13.5% sounds incredible and this growth spurt can be attributed to the second wave of COVID-19 that devastated the subcontinent during the same quarter last year. Naturally, economic activity in large swathes across India took a beating and real GDP figures tanked. This made for a low base compared to which the Indian economy registered a 13.5% real GDP growth rate in the last quarter.

As for the claim of the Indian economy pipping the UK to become the fifth largest economy, the latest GDP figures might not be the best compass through this economic terrain. Consider, for a moment, the per capita GDP gulf between the two nations, which is staggeringly large and truly embarrassing for India. For the UK, per capita figure of $47,000, India’s per capita figures scrape in at barely $2,500. In any case, the GDP is a measure of income and not wealth. Reliance on GDP figures as an indicator to suggest that India’s wealth has shot up or its poverty levels have plummeted is a disingenuous ploy that massages economic statistics for the larger goal of creating a sellable narrative. India’s GDP figures could keep climbing upward but it would never be an economic indicator suggesting an equitable redistribution of wealth. The GDP figures can continue to climb higher even if the top 1% prospers at the cost of the 99%. 

Also Read: August Trade Gap Is an Early Warning of Currency and Forex Worries

The credit rating agency India Ratings, in a note dated September 8, cautions against drawing glowing conclusions about the Indian economy considering the low base of FY21 and FY22. The real state of affairs is revealed once comparisons with the pre-pandemic scenario are made – and the picture that emerges is depressing.

“In the aftermath of COVID-19, the analysis of [year-on-year or YOY] growth,” the research note states, “does not provide a true picture of the economic recovery due to the low base of FY21 and FY22. Therefore, a better way to assess the recovery in GDP/gross value added is to compare the growth trend taking the pre-COVID period as a base. When done so, the GDP shows a [compound annual growth rate or CAGR] of just 1.3% during 1QFY20- 1QFY23 as against 6.2% during 1QFY17-1QFY20. Among all the sectors, the CAGR growth of the services sector shows the sharpest decline to 1.0% during 1QFY20-1QFY23 from 7.1% during 1QFY17-1QFY20, implying that the recovery in the sector is still weakest”.

If that isn’t enough bad news, account for the fact that the real wage growth in India has sunk into negative territory. With inflation wreaking havoc, every single rupee of a common man’s wages has lesser purchasing power now than a few years back. 

RBI

FILE PHOTO: The Reserve Bank of India seal is pictured on a gate outside the RBI headquarters in Mumbai, India, February 2, 2016. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

“The household sector which accounts for 44-45% of the GVA saw its nominal wage growth decline to 5.7% during FY17-FY21 as compared to the 8.2% growth rate recorded during FY12-FY16. This means that the wage growth in real terms is close to just about 1%. Since much of the growth in consumption demand is driven by the wage growth of the household sector, a recovery in their wage growth is going to be critical for a sustainable and durable recovery in private final consumption expenditure and overall GDP growth in FY23. Even the recent trend in wage growth at the rural and urban levels alludes to an erosion of the purchasing power of households. At the nominal level, the wage growth in urban and rural areas was 2.8% YoY and 5.5% YoY, respectively, but in real terms (adjusted for inflation) was about negative 3.7% and negative 1.6% in June 2022.” the India Ratings research note states.

In any case with the pall of inflation hanging so ominously over the global macroeconomic scene, how long could India be an outlier? India’s retail inflation, as assessed by the CPI, shot up to 7% in August from a five-month low of 6.71% recorded in July. The latest reading will further egg the central bank to follow through with the ‘new normal’ rate hike of 50 basis points (bps) in its September 2022 meeting.

According to ICRA, the early data for September 2022 shows that the average prices of potatoes, tomatoes, rice, wheat, milk, sugar and some pulses hardened in the month compared to August. Adding to inflationary concerns is the fact that total Kharif acreage for this year would have to register a handsome growth of 34% for it to match last year’s final yield, a highly unlikely prospect. Obviously, more hardships are in store for Indians.

RBI Raises Key Policy Repo Rate by 50 Points

The Reserve Bank of India’s key policy repo rate was raised by 50 basis points on Friday, the third increase in as many months to cool stubbornly high inflation.

Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India’s key policy repo rate was raised by 50 basis points on Friday, the third increase in as many months to cool stubbornly high inflation.

With June retail inflation hitting 7%, economists polled by Reuters had expected another rate hike, but views were widely split between a 25 bps move or a 50 bps increase.

The monetary policy committee (MPC) raised the key lending rate or the repo rate (INREPO=ECI) to 5.40%.

The Standing Deposit Facility rate and the Marginal Standing Facility Rate were accordingly adjusted higher by the same quantum to 5.15% and 5.65%, respectively.

The RBI caught markets off guard with a 40 bps hike at an unscheduled meeting in May, followed by 50 bps increase in June, but prices have shown little sign of cooling off yet.

With inflation seen holding above the top of the central bank’s 2-6% tolerance band for at least the rest of 2022, more rate hikes in coming months are all but inevitable, economists say.

The price spikes have hammered consumer spending and darkened the near-term outlook for India’s economic growth, which slowed to the lowest in a year in the first three months of 2022

“With inflation expected to remain above the upper tolerance threshold in Q2 and Q3 of the current financial year, the MPC stressed that sustained high inflation could destabilise inflation expectations and harm growth in the medium term,” RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said while announcing the policy decision.

“The MPC therefore judged that further calibrated withdrawal of monetary policy accommodation is warranted to keep inflation expectations anchored and contain the second round effects,” he added.

Das said the decision to increase rates was a unanimous one.

Traders are now awaiting the RBI governor’s comments on the outlook for liquidity in the banking system and any hints on the pace of tightening going ahead.

The benchmark 10-year bond yield climbed after the RBI’s decision and was at 7.2317% at 0445 GMT. It had declined to 7.1073% earlier on Friday after ending at 7.1516% on Thursday.

The partially convertible rupee firmed slightly to 78.99 per dollar, from 79.16 prior to the policy decision. The local unit had closed at 79.4650 in the previous session.

(Reuters)

Raising Policy Rates Not ‘Anti-National’, RBI Should Have Latitude To Do It: Raghuram Rajan

Bureaucrats and politicians should not see the measure as benefitting foreign investors but instead as an investment “whose greatest beneficiary is the Indian citizen”, the former RBI governor said.

New Delhi: Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan on Monday warned that the central bank will have to raise policy rates eventually, asking the politicians and bureaucrats to understand that this measure is “not some anti-national activity” that will benefit foreign investors but an investment “whose greatest beneficiary is the Indian citizen”.

In a LinkedIn post, Rajan said the war against inflation is never over, noting that inflation in India is up. Central banks across the world are raising policy rates, he said, adding that the RBI will have to follow suit – although he refrained from predicting when that may be.

When it happens, he said politicians and bureaucrats should see it as “an investment in economic stability, whose greatest beneficiary is the Indian citizen”. Rajan, who is now professor of finance at Chicago University, said he had experience in battling high inflation during his term as RBI governor.

When he became RBI governor in September 2013, “India had a full blown currency crisis with the rupee having experienced free fall”, Rajan wrote, noting that inflation was at 9.5% then – it is at 6.95% now.

Also Read: As Retail Inflation Hits a High of 6.95% in March, Expect a June Policy Rate Hike

Rajan continued, “The RBI raised the repo rate from 7.25% in September 2013 to 8% to quell inflation. As inflation came down, we cut the repo rate by 150 basis points to 6.5%. We also signed on to an inflation targeting framework with the government.”

These actions, he said did not just stabilise the economy and the rupee but “also enhanced growth”, adding that between August 2013 and August 2016, inflation came down from 9.5% to 5.3% while growth picked up from 5.91% in June-August 2013 to 9.31% in June-August 2016.

“The rupee depreciated only mildly over 3 years from 63.2 to 66.9 to the dollar. Our foreign exchange reserves rose from US $ 275 billion in September 2013 to US $ 371 billion in September 2016,” he wrote.

he said not all this was the RBl’s doing, but some clearly was. “And it was not a flash in the pan, suggesting we were laying the foundations for stability. The RBI has since maintained low inflation and low interest rates through troubling times like the demonetisation, the fall-off in growth, and the pandemic,” Rajan said.

Rajan said because India has reserves of over $600 billion, the RBI has been able to calm financial markets even as oil prices have climbed – unlike in 1990-91, when the country had to approach the IMF due to higher oil prices. “The RBl’s sound economic management has helped ensure this has not
happened this time,” he said.

Saying that he and other RBI governors were criticised when rates were raised, Rajan said it “helps to let the facts talk” –  and that the correct facts are important to guide future policy. “It is essential that the RBI does what it needs to, and the broader polity gives it the latitude to do so,” he said.

The full text of his post is republished below.

§

It is important to remember that the war against inflation is never over. Inflation is up in India. At some point, the RBI will have to raise rates, like the rest of the world is doing (I will refrain from trying to predict when). At such times, politicians and bureaucrats will have to understand that the rise in policy rates is not some anti-national activity benefiting foreign investors, but is an investment in economic stability, whose greatest beneficiary is the Indian citizen.

Indeed, my experience as the last RBI governor who had to fight high inflation bears this out. I became RBI governor with a three year term in September 2013 when India had a full blown currency crisis with the rupee having experienced free fall.

Inflation was at 9.5% then. The RBI raised the repo rate from 7.25% in September 2013 to 8% to quell inflation. As inflation came down, we cut the repo rate by 150 basis points to 6.5%. We also signed on to an inflation targeting framework with the government.

These actions not only helped stabilize the economy and the rupee, they also enhanced growth. Between August 2013 and August 2016, inflation came down from 9.5% to 5.3%. Growth picked up from 5.91% in June-August 2013 to 9.31% in June-August 2016. The rupee depreciated only mildly over 3 years from 63.2 to 66.9 to the dollar. Our foreign exchange reserves rose from US $ 275 billion in September 2013 to US $ 371 billion in September 2016.

Of course, not all this was the RBl’s doing, but some clearly was. And it was not a flash in the pan, suggesting we were laying the foundations for stability. The RBI has since maintained low inflation and low interest rates through troubling times like the demonetization, the fall-off in growth, and the pandemic.

Today, reserves have climbed to over $ 600 billion, allowing the RBI to calm financial markets even as oil prices have climbed. Recall that the crisis in 1990-91, when we had to approach the IMF, was precipitated by higher oil prices. The RBl’s sound economic management has helped ensure this has not
happened this time.

Of course, no one is happy when rates have to be raised. I still get brickbats from politically-motivated critics who allege the RBI held back the economy during my term. Some of my predecessors were similarly criticized. At such times, it helps to let the facts talk. And the correct facts are important to guide future policy. It is essential that the RBI does what it needs to, and the broader polity gives it the latitude to do so.

RBI Braces for Higher Inflation, Keeps Repo Rate Unchanged

The earlier assessment of CPI inflation for FY23 in the February MPC meet of 4.5% now stands revised to 5.7%.

Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy committee (MPC) opted to keep the policy repo rate unchanged at 4%. At the same time, the MPC chose to remain accommodative while fixing its attention on  soaking up extra liquidity from the economy, in a bid to ensure that inflation is kept in check while economic activity stays on a resilient growth path.

The MPC also kept the Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) – a provision that lets banks borrow from the RBI on an overnight basis – at 4%. Additionally, the RBI expanded its liquidity containing toolbox with two broad measures.

Firstly, it restored the width of the Liquidity Adjustment Facility to 50 basis points, a position that prevailed prior to the pandemic. Secondly, it decided to institute the Standing Deposit Facility – at the floor of the LAF corridor – which will be placed at 3.75%.The SDF facility allows the RBI to absorb liquidity from the banks without giving them any government collateral in return.

Accessing the SDF and the MSF will be at the discretion of the banks, unlike repo/reverse repo or OMO or CRR which are dictated by the RBI.

Inflation watch

Whatever comfort the RBI could draw from a fading and relatively weaker Omicron variant Covid wave was undone by the Russia-Ukraine offensive. The MPC’s rather tame inflation expectations have rightfully been shattered in the face of the seismic geo-political tensions that are stoking inflationary commodity cycles globally.

The earlier assessment of CPI inflation for FY23 in the February MPC meet of 4.5% now stands revised to 5.7%. The revision in terms of the forthcoming quarters is also quite drastic and signals at the larger failure of the central bank at correctly assessing the lay of the land. The MPC’s dovish stand in February at a time when a sterner, more hawkish tone, was merited drew criticism from a number of economists who warned that the RBI was far behind the curve.

Inflation forecasts by the MPC

Quarters February 2022 meet April 2022 meet (revised)
Q1FY23 4.9% 6.3%
Q2FY23 5% 5.8%
Q3FY23 4% 5.4%
Q4FY23 4.2% 5.1%
FY23 4.5% 5.7%

“Heightened geopolitical tensions since end-February have, however, upended the earlier narrative and considerably clouded the inflation outlook for the year,” RBI governor Shaktikanta Das said in his statement. 

Governor Das is counting on a likely record Rabi harvest that will aid in keeping domestic prices of cereals and pulses in control. Rising fertiliser prices – thanks to a global scarcity not just in fertiliser ingredients but also in finished products – will contribute to elevated input costs for the farmers, and other stakeholders in the supply chain, leading to a spillover impact on prices of poultry, milk and other dairy products. 

Commenting on the anticipated inflationary spike in non-food items, the governor said, “The spike in international crude oil prices since end February poses substantial upside risk to inflation through both direct and indirect effects. Sharp increase in domestic pump prices could trigger broad-based second round price pressures. A combination of high international commodity prices and elevated logistic disruptions could aggravate input costs across agriculture, manufacturing and services sectors. Their pass-through to retail prices, therefore, warrants continuous monitoring and pro-active supply management.”

However, the governor also struck a note of caution pointing out that any projection of growth and inflation is fraught with risk, “given the excessive volatility in global crude oil prices since late February and the extreme uncertainty over the evolving geopolitical tensions.” 

The MPC is of the view that since the February meeting, the ratcheting up of geopolitical tensions, generalised hardening of global commodity prices, the likelihood of prolonged supply chain disruptions, dislocations in trade and capital flows, divergent monetary policy responses and volatility in global financial markets are imparting sizeable upside risks to the inflation trajectory and downside risks to domestic growth.” the MPC resolution stated. 

Why Budget 2022 Was an Exercise With Misplaced Priorities

The budgetary exercise cannot be meaningful unless it addresses the primary concerns in an economy.

Denials and rejections of the most pressing issue in the Indian economy today – which is providing employment as minimum livelihood options for the majority – need to be underscored in the current budget. Added to the above are the woes related to the cuts on the already small social sector spending for health and education, especially with the pandemic, along with reduced public offers of rural employment under MNREGA – not to speak of the continuing steep rise in food items.

Following the most reliable statistics provided by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), 65% of the labour force could not find any job – as indicated by the labour force participation ratio (LFPR) at 35% at its peak over the 21 day lockdown months of 2021. The sample covers all sections of the labour force other than migrants mostly located in construction sites, who are further affected. As compared to the employment figures of FY 2019-20 at 409 million, the number employed in December 2021, according to the CMIE, stood at 405 million. This amounted to a 3 million job loss as compared to the pre-pandemic period. Counting on the already low LFPR, the job requirements, according to same source, shot up to 8.5 million – a rather tall order when compared to the budget estimate of 60 lakh (or 0.6 million) jobs expected over the next FY.

To explain the announced target for job creation as above, the budget in all probability relies on the focus on capex with a 25% enhancement in the budgeted allocation to Rs 7.5 trillion on infrastructures as an aid to job creation. That the multiplier effects of capital expenditure do not create demand for jobs instantly follow from the basics of macro-economic logic. The failure rests on investment (say capex) and the demand generated for jobs in the same units which usually are capital-intensive.

The next round of job availability comes when the newly employed persons in those units spend on consumption goods, creating additional consumption demand which leads to expansion of output with additional demand for labour. The sequence, which may continue, neither generates instantaneous labour demand nor is it adequate to fill up the much needed gap in the number of jobs which keep missing.

Also read: Budget 2022: There’s Good and Bad News on the Jobs Front

Here, one can contrast the gains, small or large, as are available for the rich, primarily consisting of big capital, in the budget. One notices the big cut in surcharges on corporate earnings from 12% to 7%, obviously to subsidise those concerns. Taxes are reduced on co-operatives, which however may be of especial help to the losing concerns where money is often looted by the corrupt management. Announcement of further reductions in taxes include the Long term capital gains (LTCGs) on equities by capping those taxes down to 15%. This will be of considerable gain to large corporates as well as the rich individuals as who can afford to be risk-averse in the stock market.

The possibilities of hiding undisclosed income has been facilitated by extending the period of submitting returns to two full fiscal years. Finally, the passive role of the state towards the portfolio-led boom as well as volatility in the stock market has acted as a major force to widen income disparities between the rich and poor. Accepted as a norm under de-regulated finance with moderate to free capital flows in the market, the state exercises no concern for the resulting inequity as well as financial instability. Nor has the state any authority under de-regulated finance to manage the basic parameters in the domestic economy which include the interest rate or the exchange rate.

A classic example of the related state of subordinate finance include the emergence of the “taper tantrum” on part of the US Fed as a measure to control US inflation. The rise in interest rates by the Fed may be responsible for a flight of short term capital from countries like India with serious consequences which include drop in official reserves, depreciation of the exchange rate and attempts on part of the RBI to stall the capital outflows by raising domestic interest rates. None of those measures indicate a state of autonomy on part of the monetary authorities, especially by forcing the tightening of domestic interest rates which will cause downslides in the real sector involving jobs and output growth.

To amend the limitations of the so-called capex-led creation of jobs as projected in the recent budget one needs supplementary and remedial interventions to thwart the vicious cycle which is incapable to address the major issue of employment and related livelihoods. This can not be achieved by sheer expansions in the sum spent on capital goods in infrastructure projects, nor by temporary cash grants to the poverty-stricken people which can not be a substitute for jobs providing income on a continuing basis. Addressing the joblessness for the poor needs additions to MNREGA expenditure, not cuts as in the budget, and not just in the rural but also in urban areas. Creation of jobs also demands better deals for labour much of which has been scrapped by the newly initiated labour code in February 2020, just before the onset of the Pandemic. The measures also need to restore the rightful claims of casual labour and the migrants having no official status as employed persons.

Finally, with privatisation of public sector units, the shortfall in job opportunities relative to demands for jobs can not be met by job offers with MNREGA alone. One needs a pro-active private sector sharing the responsibilities by using labour-intensive technology, which may need a carrot and stick policy on part of state using subsidies or taxes.

The budgetary exercise cannot be meaningful unless it addresses the primary concerns in an economy. For a democratically elected government the concern needs to focus on the well-being of people who constitute the electorate. A negation of above, as with the present situation in India, conflicts with the basic responsibilities of the state as well as the rightful claims of people including the workforce. The claims obviously include a sustainable livelihood with job openings and social security measures.

Sunanda Sen has been a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.

RBI Maintains Status Quo For 10th Time; Leaves Benchmark Lending Rate at 4%

RBI had last revised its policy repo rate or the short-term lending rate on May 22, 2020.

Mumbai: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 4% and decided to continue with its accommodative stance in the backdrop of elevated level of inflation.

This is the tenth time in a row that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) headed by RBI governor Shaktikanta Das has maintained the status quo. RBI had last revised its policy repo rate or the short-term lending rate on May 22, 2020 in an off-policy cycle to perk up demand by cutting the interest rate to a historic low.

This is the first MPC meeting after presentation of Budget 2022-23 in Parliament on February 1.

MPC has decided to keep benchmark repurchase (repo) rate at 4%, Das said while announcing the bi-monthly monetary policy review.

Consequently, the reverse repo rate will continue to earn 3.35% interest for banks for their deposits kept with RBI.