Bloomberg
India’s monetary policy-makers disagreed sharply over whether the economy needed another dose of stimulus, underlining their dilemma as growth slowed with inflation forecast to accelerate.
While five on the six-member monetary policy committee voted to keep the key policy rate unchanged this month, one member said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) must be ready to tighten while another said August’s 25 basis point cut was too little and too late. Governor Urjit Patel, his deputy Viral Acharya, and Pami Dua said recent indicators have been volatile and more data is needed to ascertain the magnitude of risks, according to minutes of the meeting.
“The credibility of the MPC will be tested in the months ahead,” said Michael Patra, the most hawkish member of the group.
Data released after the RBI’s decision showed inflation unexpectedly steadied at 3.3 percent in September from a year earlier. The monetary authority had raised its inflation forecast to a range of 4.2 percent to 4.6 percent for October-March, higher than its 4 percent medium-term target and the previous projection of 3.5 percent to
4.5 percent.
It also lowered the estimate for gross value added — a key measure of growth — to 6.6 percent for the year through March 31, 2018, from 7.3 percent, keeping alive speculation that it could cut rates later this year. Gross domestic product had slowed to a three-year low in the April-June quarter, slugged by the government’s cash ban and ahead of a new goods and services tax. The repurchase rate was left at a seven-year low of 6 percent.
“The implementation of the GST has rendered prospects for the manufacturing sector uncertain in the short-term,” Patel said. “This may further delay the acceleration in investment activity. However, there is a need for more data to assess whether the recent headwinds in overall GDP growth prints are transient or sustained.”
Acharya said given the central bank’s inflation outlook “has risen quite some distance over the target of 4 percent, there did not seem much room for monetary policy adjustment.” Patra said the RBI should be ready to raise interest rates if inflation breaches 4 percent. “The minutes revealed an intense debate on the growth and inflation outlook and appropriate policy response — but did not suggest a bias towards easing,” Morgan Stanley economists including
Derrick Kam wrote in a report.
There was one MPC member who called for a steep cut. Arch-dove Ravindra Dholakia argued that there was enough slack in the economy and inflation would rise only marginally, leaving enough room for more cuts.
“In my view, the policy rate should have been cut by 50 basis points long back in June 2017,” Dholakia said. “A cut of 25 basis points in August was too small and too late.”