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The Monetary Policy Committee’s December review comes against a dramatically different backdrop when compared to the one in October.
Crude oil prices are down more than 20 percent. The rupee has gained 5 percent. Upside risks to inflation have, for now, turned to downside risks. No surprise then that most economists are predicting a status quo on rates.
According to Bloomberg, 48 of the 52 economists polled, believe that the MPC will continue to maintain a status quo on the repo rate. After 50 basis points in repo rate hikes so far this financial year, the benchmark rate now stands at 6.5 percent.
Beyond the near-term decision of keeping rates on hold, the MPC will need to do some soul-searching on its inflation forecasting abilities. Retail inflation has remained below forecasts for the last five months and is currently under the mid-point of the inflation target of 4 (+/- 2) percent.
To be sure, the MPC does not need to respond to monthly prints and is looking to bring inflation down to 4 percent in a durable manner. However, the trajectory of low food prices gives them enough reason to debate whether inflation will end the year lower than the projection of 3.9-4.5 percent.
At the October policy review, the committee had highlighted the upside risks to inflation emerging from oil prices. “Oil prices remain vulnerable to further upside pressures, especially if the response of oil-producing nations to supply disruptions from geopolitical tensions is not adequate,” the committee had noted in its resolution.
However, since then Brent crude oil prices are down by close to 25 percent. While the committee may remain cautious given the sharp volatility seen in oil prices this year, it may whittle down the upside risk being built into inflation projections on account of oil prices.
The fall in price of crude has also helped stabilise the rupee.
Bhandari sees no change in rates in December but expects one rate hike in 2019.
While the comfort on inflation has increased, the comfort on growth has decreased.
At 7.1 percent, GDP growth came in lower than expectations for the second quarter of the current fiscal year. The MPC had retained its economic growth projection at 7.4 percent for the current financial year when it last met, but there is now a possibility of a lower full year growth estimate, said Radhika Rao, economist at DBS Bank.
The recently released second quarter GDP data showed some signs of a fall in consumption growth, possibly due to rural distress and heightened crude oil prices. While investment has remained strong, high real rates in India could prove to be a dampener for growth.
Growth is expected to moderate further to 6.6 percent in the second half of the year, according to Kotak Economics Research. The more important question is whether India’s potential GDP would also be lower, the report asked.
Liquidity could tighten going forward amid higher leakage from currency in circulation, advance tax outflows and tighter government spending, said Madhavi Arora, economist at Edelweiss Research. However, the central bank is likely to continue tackling this through open market operations rather than through a lowering of the cash reserve ratio (CRR), Arora said.
After remaining in deficit for the last few months, liquidity conditions have eased in recent days. The RBI has announced its intention to buy bonds worth Rs 40,000 crore in December.
(This story has been published in an arrangement with BloombergQuint.)
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