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Election years can be treacherous for India’s economic policy makers. While these policymakers may eventually stand their ground on decisions that must be made, the ambient noise is louder when elections are around the corner.
In that context, a recent casual conversation brought up a question – inflation is rising but can interest rates be raised much in an election year? The quick and confident response to that was, of course!
In fact, that was one argument made in favour of an MPC by former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan.
Now that the MPC is firmly in place we can be reasonably sure that any decision, right or wrong, will be made based on the beliefs of individual members. Over the last 11 meetings of the MPC, those beliefs have started to become clearer to monetary policy watchers. Through the minutes, the personalities of the country’s monetary policy makers have begun to emerge.
That RBI Governor Urjit Patel is a man of few words is now well accepted. Patel’s MPC statements reflect that. What he says in the MPC’s minutes is very close to what was written in the monetary policy resolution.
Patel gives away little on the indicators that he sees as most important or the factors that he feels outweigh others. At most, his statement holds a few extra words of emphasis.
Take, for instance, the minutes of the June MPC meet.
Patel details the upside risks to inflation highlighted in the committee’s resolution. He goes on to cite growth indicators, also part of the MPC’s joint statement. Finally, he shares his vote and says that it is “apposite” to maintain a neutral policy stance “to respond to the evolving situation in a flexible manner.”
Analysts held on to that last statement and used that as one clue that Patel may consider one or two more rate hikes as adequate for this cycle.
Deputy Governor Viral Acharya is quite the opposite.
Often, it seems like he is debating the issues out in open before explaining his final decision. Recently, he has even given guidance on his future course of action.
In the April meeting, Acharya put out an extensive statement on his reading of the evolving inflation scenario. He made a distinction between the ‘signal’ and the ‘noise’ embedded in the inflation data.
He went on the say that he is likely to vote for a ‘withdrawal of accommodation’ in the June. Acharya, like others in the committee, voted for a rate hike in June. He explained the hike as a way “to signal concern about underlying inflation, manage inflation expectations, and guard proactively against a further increase in inflation.”
That, together, with his view that a neutral stance would allow the MPC to respond in a flexible manner, led analysts to believe that he too forsees a shallow rate cycle.
RBI Executive Director Michael Patra, a central bank lifer, has been termed as the resident hawk of the monetary policy committee. The analyst fraternity is familiar with him and the indicators he tracks. That’s not to say that the markets always agree with him. To the contrary, in fact.
Patra’s statements carry candour and conviction. He started arguing for higher rates as early as last December. In February, he voted for higher rates and cautioned that a series of rate hikes may be needed. In April, Patra said that growth impulses are strengthening. Absent policy action, the MPC would not be in a position to meet the mid-point of its 4 (+/-2) percent inflation target even in 2018-19, Patra cautioned.
The three external members of the MPC come from an academic background but Ravindra Dholakia comes across as the archetypal professor.
His views are as strong as Patra’s but sometimes diametrically opposite. Oh, to be a fly on the wall when Patra and Dholakia are debating monetary policy!
Dholakia had been arguing for rate cuts last year. That prompted many to call him a dove. Dholakia, however, proved that analysis wrong and showed that he is driven by certain data points that he believes in. Among them is the Business Inflation Expectation Survey, conducted by the Indian Institute of Management - Ahmedabad. The survey covers 2,500 respondents and complements the household inflation expectations survey conducted by the RBI.
Many expected a split MPC in June, with Dholakia expected to continue voting for a status quo. The committee, however, surprised with a unanimous vote.
Dholakia, like Patel and Acharya, felt that a neutral stance was warranted, leaving analysts guessing on his preference for future action.
Pami Dua’s mind is tough to read. Her statements follow the message in the data.
She typically cites the data releases of the government and the RBI, along with the indicators crafted by the Economic Cycle Research Institute. That’s not surprising given that Dua teaches econometrics, time series analysis, forecasting and macroeconomics at the Delhi School of Economics.
Her comments are to-the-point and data driven. But its tough to gauge her broader views on the outlook for the economy. Her vote to hike rates in June was driven by “hardening of actual inflation, rising inflation expectations along with prevailing upside risks to inflation.”
But her preference for a neutral stance could equally mean that she favours spacing out the rate hikes.
Chetan Ghate came to the MPC with a long list of accolades under his belt. He was the winner of the 2014 Mahalanobis gold medal in economics and had a number of prestigious degrees and teaching assignments to his name. He was also a member of the committee headed by Patel, which had recommended the new monetary policy framework.
Ghate’s MPC statements have offered analysis beyond the data.
For instance, in February, when the MPC met soon after the union budget, Ghate flagged off his research which had shown how an increase in the minimum support price can lead to generalised inflation. That debate will make a comeback in August, with the details of the MSP hikes now in public domain.
In April, Ghate spoke of the possibility of the “twin terms of trade shocks”. Could higher MSP and rising oil prices complicate the growth-inflation trade-off, he asked.
With that target still some distance away, Ghate could well see the need for another rate hike soon.
(Ira Dugal is Editor - Banking, Finance & Economy at BloombergQuint.)
(This story was originally published on BloombergQuint and is an opinion piece. The views expressed are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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