India's 'Goldilocks' economy to prompt cenbank to keep rates on hold
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[April 03, 2024] By
Swati Bhat
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Strong economic growth and moderating inflation means
India's central bank will have room to keep interest rates on hold at
its review this week and likely until July, economists say.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is widely expected to keep rates
unchanged on Friday, for the seventh consecutive meeting.
All 56 economists in the March 15-22 Reuters poll expected the RBI to
hold the repo rate at 6.50% while most expect no change at least until
July.
The RBI has ample room to remain on hold in the near term, Barclays said
in a note.
The central bank last changed rates in February 2023, when the policy
rate was hiked to 6.5%.
"We think the RBI will have to consider the balance of risks between
over tightening (given the 'not-too-hot-nor-too-cold' state of the
economy) and maintaining monetary policy conditions for achieving
reasonably good real GDP growth of at least 7.0%," Barclays economists
wrote, referring to the proverbial "Goldilocks" ideal state of stable
economic growth.
As India heads into a general election this month, the economy is
growing faster than expected amid signs prices are trending lower though
food inflation remains a risk.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said at an event on Monday that the RBI
must give top priority to growth but at the same time focus on trust and
stability. Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party is expected
to secure a comfortable win for a third straight term at the polls
starting on April 19.
India's economy grew a stellar 8.4% in the fourth quarter of 2023, the
fastest among major economies while retail prices in February rose at a
faster-than-expected pace of 5.09% due to elevated food prices, staying
above the RBI's 4% target.
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A Reserve Bank of India (RBI) logo is seen inside its headquarters
in Mumbai, India, April 6, 2023. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
In February, one of six monetary policy committee members voted for
a cut in policy rates arguing that real rates in India are too high
since inflation is seen easing to an average of 4.5% in 2024-25.
"India's growth is robust when compared to the rest of the world,
but not when compared to our potential or to our aspirations,"
monetary policy committee's external member Jayanth Varma told
Reuters.
But central bank governor Shaktikanta Das has repeatedly said that
it is premature to ease policy before inflation returns to the 4%
target.
Headline inflation in India has remained above the central bank's
target, core inflation has fallen below 4%, which some say may allow
the central bank to signal policy easing ahead.
The current monetary policy stance is 'withdrawal of accommodation',
signalling that monetary policy will likely remain tight.
"We do not expect any change in the policy rate, but a probable
explicit or implicit change in stance cannot be ruled out," said
Parijat Agrawal, head of fixed income at Union Mutual Fund.
The RBI's monetary policy setting is independent but that has not
prevented governments in the past from exerting pressure on the
central bank for easier lending policies to support growth.
"At the margin, the RBI will prefer to stay on the sidelines to
prevent any flare up of concerns over its independence," said
Thamashi De Silva, assistant India economist at Capital Economics.
(Reporting by Swati Bhat; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
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