Skip to main content

Decision- making enters a difficult zone

There is almost full consensus that the Reserve Bank of India ( RBI) is unlikely to lower the repo interest rate in June, especially after signalling in the last policy that it would keenly monitor liquidity dynamics and infuse ā€œ primary liquidityā€ to support its accommodative stance. Further out, the market remains hopeful that RBI could deliver a last 25- basis point repo cut around August, post clarity on monsoons.
Though not a zero probability yet, scope for RBI to implement more repo cuts is shrinking at a fast pace and this could be irrespective of the monsoon dynamics. While headline Consumer Price Index (CPI)- based inflation increased to 5.4 per cent in April, the cereals inflation that should mostly get affected by the monsoon is not too significant even today and is at around 2.5 per cent. Vegetables and pulses prices have been volatile and might continue to be so in the near future.
Beyond the food prices, the key issue that is not easily ignorable is the firm to firming core inflation measure. Core inflation averaged at 4.5 per cent in FY16, definitely down from early FY15 levels of eight per cent or whereabouts, but any incremental softening bias might be a dream. Note that one of the significant comforts for core inflation came from dips in domestic prices of petrol and diesel, enabled by a drop in the global crude oil prices. From the date of the April policy announcement to today, global Brent oil prices have moved higher by 31 per cent, while the currency has also been on a depreciation bias.
Leaving the above aside, inflation levels from the other components of the core has been extremely sideways and in a 5 per cent- plus zone, even with a baseline argument of a continuing demand slack in the economy. This, as has also been pointed out by RBI in its April monetary policy, is clearly indicative of capacity constraints in the services sector ā€” education, housing, health care etc. With nothing getting done to enhance capacity in these areas, the downward bias for headline CPI inflation could be restricted.
Further, headline WPI ( Wholesale Price Index) has turned positive now, and should reflect on retail inflation with a lag.
Scope for dips in core and also headline CPI inflation might also be restricted as economy pundits expect growth momentum to improve with a pick- up in consumption demand via monsoonlinked improvement in rural demand and due to increase in disposable incomes through implementation of the Pay Commission.
In the above scenario, the lookout from the policy will be more on the communication and the guidance on growth and inflation. The US Fed moves, Brexit and China trends and the consequent implication of the same on global financial markets would be a critical input for RBI in its decision for incremental repo rate cuts.
Business Standard New Delhi, 03 June 2016

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Budget: Startup sector gets new Fund of Funds, FM to allocate Rs 10K cr

  The Indian startup sector received a boost with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announcing the establishment of a new fund of funds (FoF) in the Budget 2025. The minister unveiled a fresh FoF with an expanded scope, allocating Rs 10,000 crore. The initial fund of funds announced by the government with an investment of Rs 10,000 crore successfully catalysed commitments worth Rs 91,000 crore, the minister said.   ā€œThe renewal of the Rs 10,000 crore commitment to the Fund of Funds for alternative investment funds (AIFs) is a significant step forward for the Indian startup and investment ecosystem. The initial Rs 10,000 crore commitment catalysed Rs 91,000 crore in investments, and I fully expect this fresh infusion to attract an additional Rs 1 lakh to Rs 1.5 lakh crore in capital,ā€ said Anirudh Damani, managing partner, Artha Venture Funds.   Damani further added that this initiative will provide much-needed growth capital to early-stage startups, further strengthenin...

GST collection for November rises by 8.5% to Rs.1.82 trillion

  New Delhi: Driven by festive demand, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections for the Union and state governments climbed to Rs.1.82 trillion in November, marking an 8.5% year-on-year growth, according to official data released on Sunday. Sequentially, however, the latest collection figures are lower than the Rs.1.87 trillion reported in October, which was the second highest reported so far since the new indirect tax regime was introduced in 2017. The highest-ever GST collection of Rs.2.1 trillion was reported in April. The consumption tax figures highlight the positive impact of the recent festive season on goods purchases, providing a much-needed boost the industry had been anticipating. The uptick in GST collections driven by festive demand had been anticipated by policymakers, who remain optimistic about sustained growth in rural consumption and an improvement in urban demand. The Ministry of Finance, in its latest monthly economic review released last week, stated that I...