MID-QUARTER MONETARY POLICY REVIEW: DECEMBER 2013
Monetary
and Liquidity Measures
On the basis of an assessment of the current
and evolving macroeconomic situation, it has been decided to:
• Keep the policy repo
rate under the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) unchanged at 7.75 percent.
• Keep the cash reserve
ratio (CRR) of scheduled banks unchanged at 4.0 percent of net demand and time
liability (NDTL).
Consequently, the
reverse repo rate under the LAF will remain unchanged at 6.75 percent, and the
marginal standing facility (MSF) rate and the Bank Rate at 8.75 percent.
CURRENT RATES
|
||
POLICY RATES
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BANK RATE
|
8.75%
|
REPO RATE
|
7.75%
|
|
REVERSE REPO RATE
|
6.75%
|
|
MARGINAL STANDING FACILITY RATE
|
8.75%
|
|
RESERVE RATIO
|
CRR
|
4%
|
SLR
|
23%
|
|
LENDING RATE
|
BASE RATE
|
9.80% - 10.25%
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Assessment
The outlook for global
growth continues to remain moderate, with an uneven recovery across industrial
countries. Activity in major emerging market economies (EMEs) barring China has
decelerated on account of weak domestic demand, notwithstanding some
improvement in export performance. While volatility in financial markets has
receded, it could pick up again following the inevitable taper of quantitative
easing in the US, given the large dependence of EMEs on external financing.
In India, the pick-up
in real GDP growth in Q2 of 2013-14, albeit modest, was driven largely by
robust growth of agricultural activity, supported by an improvement in net
exports. However, the weakness in industrial activity persisting into
Q3, still lacklustre lead indicators of services and subdued domestic
consumption demand suggest continuing headwinds to growth. Tightening government
spending in Q4 to meet budget projections will add to these headwinds. In this
context, the revival of stalled investment, especially in the projects cleared
by the Cabinet Committee on Investment, will be critical.
Retail inflation
measured by the consumer price index (CPI) has risen unrelentingly through the
year so far, pushed up by the unseasonal upturn in vegetable prices,
double-digit housing inflation and elevated levels of inflation in the non-food
and non-fuel categories. While vegetable prices seem to be adjusting downwards
sharply in certain areas, the feed-through to much-too-high headline CPI
inflation remains to be seen. Wholesale inflation has also gone up sharply from
Q2 onwards, with upside pressures evident across all constituent components.
High inflation at both wholesale and retail levels risks entrenching inflation
expectations at unacceptably elevated levels, posing a threat to growth and
financial stability. There are also signs of a resumption of high rural wage
growth, suggesting second round effects that cannot be ignored. High and
persistent inflation also increases the risks of exchange rate
instability.
With the normalization
of exceptional monetary measures, liquidity conditions have improved, as
reflected in the steady decline in the access to the MSF. Capital inflows
under the Reserve Bank’s swap facilities for banking capital and non-resident
deposits augmented domestic liquidity significantly from the end of November.
Over the first two weeks of December, banks refrained from utilising the
limits under the overnight LAF repo and export credit refinance, and, in fact,
excess liquidity was parked with the Reserve Bank through reverse repo.
Anticipating the temporary tightness in liquidity starting from
mid-December 2013 on account of advance tax payments, the Reserve Bank
conducted additional 14-day term repo auction of `100 billion on
December 13, augmenting the normal access to liquidity from the Reserve Bank to
the tune of 1.5 per cent of NDTL (i.e., about `1.2 trillion) under overnight
repos, term repos, and the export credit refinance facility. The Reserve Bank
also opened a refinance facility of`50 billion for the Small Industries
Development Bank of India (SIDBI) aimed at addressing
liquidity stress faced by medium, micro and small enterprises. Liquidity
is being managed with a view to ensuring that there is adequate credit flow to
the productive sectors of the economy.
The narrowing of the
trade deficit since June through November, on positive export growth and
contraction in both oil and non-oil imports, should bring the current account
deficit (CAD) down to a more sustainable level for the year as a whole. Robust
inflows into the swap windows opened by the Reserve Bank during August-November
have contributed significantly to rebuilding foreign exchange reserves thus
covering possible external financing requirements and providing stability to
the foreign exchange market. Looking ahead, these favourable developments
should help to build resilience to external shocks.
Policy
Stance and Rationale
Recent readings suggest
that headline inflation, both retail and wholesale, have increased, mainly on
account of food prices. While CPI and wholesale price index (WPI)
inflation excluding food and fuel have been stable, despite a steady and
necessary increase in administered prices towards market levels, the high level
of CPI inflation excluding food and fuel leaves no room for complacency. There
is, however, reason to wait before determining the course of monetary policy.
There are indications that vegetable prices may be turning down sharply,
although trading mark-ups could impede the full pass-through into retail
inflation. In addition, the disinflationary impact of recent exchange rate
stability should play out into prices. Finally, the negative output gap,
including the recent observed slowdown in services growth, as well as the
lagged effects of effective monetary tightening since July, should help contain
inflation.
The policy decision is
a close one. Current inflation is too high. However, given the wide bands of
uncertainty surrounding the short term path of inflation from its high current
levels, and given the weak state of the economy, the inadvisability of overly
reactive policy action, as well as the long lags with which monetary policy
works, there is merit in waiting for more data to reduce uncertainty.
There are obvious risks
to waiting for more data, including the possibility that tapering of
quantitative easing by the US Fed may disrupt external markets and that the
Reserve Bank may be perceived to be soft on inflation. The Reserve Bank will be
vigilant. Even though the Reserve Bank maintains status quo today, it can help
guide market expectations through a clearer description of its policy reaction
function: if the expected softening of food inflation does not materialise and
translate into a significant reduction in headline inflation in the next round
of data releases, or if inflation excluding food and fuel does not fall, the
Reserve Bank will act, including on off-policy dates if warranted, so that
inflation expectations stabilise and an environment conducive to sustainable
growth takes hold. The Reserve Bank’s policy action on those dates will be
appropriately calibrated.
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