The MPC met on December 5 and 6 to announce a status
quo in the key policy repo rate at 6 percent. Next policy is on
February 6 and 7, 2018
to inflation due to the rise in oil prices, uncertainties on the
fiscal and external front will keep the central bank vigilant, said the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Urjit Patel in the minutes of the
fifth bi-monthly and 7th meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).
The MPC met on December 5 and 6 to announce status quo in the key policy repo rate at 6 percent.
Of
the six members of MPC, only one member - Ravindra H Dholakia, a
government nominee - voted for a policy rate reduction of 25 basis
points (bps).
Other members -- Chetan Ghate, Pami Dua, Michael
Debabrata Patra, Viral V. Acharya and Urjit R Patel were in favour of
the monetary policy decision.
Urjit Patel
Patel,
who heads the committee, said, "The macroeconomic situation has
remained broadly unchanged since the last MPC meeting in October 2017.
However, the recent upturn in crude oil prices has emerged as a source
of concern."
"Several uncertainties, especially on the fiscal and
external fronts, persist. It is, therefore, important to be vigilant.
Hence, I vote for status quo," he said.
Patel pointed out "several
risks to the projected inflation trajectory" - 1. Inflation
expectations of households for both three-month ahead and one-year ahead
periods in the latest round of the Reserve Bank’s survey moved up, 2.
Rising input cost pressures for both manufacturing and services raising
risks of pass-through on output prices and 3. Fiscal slippage concerns
still linger on.
Ravindra Dholakia
Dholakia,
the lone dissenter, did not agree with the RBI’s assessment for both
the CPI inflation and the economic growth prospects in the near-term.
"I
also do not share its over-concerns for the upside risks on inflation
and over-optimism on economic growth front. In my opinion, the inflation
situation is under reasonable control and is likely to remain well
within the acceptable range during the foreseeable future because after a
couple of months favourable base effects will set in," he said.
According to him, the real cause of concern right now is the economic recovery and its slow pace.
He
further said, "Fiscal space is more or less exhausted but the space for
the monetary boost has fortunately been available now for a relatively
long period. Had the policy rate been cut to 5.75 percent in June 2017
as I had argued then, the economic recovery would have been far more
rapid and we would have been in a much better position."
Michael Patra
As
per RBI Executive Director, Patra, the investment temper remains
dormant. "It awaits reforms that bite the bullet in terms of freeing up
product and factor markets, removing barriers to entry and exit, and
rekindling productivity and competitiveness all around. As growth
regains solid ground, it could likely sustain inflation above the
target."
Hinting at a rate hike, Patra added that the time has
come for monetary policy to take guard and be ready to go on to the
front foot.
Viral Acharya
As per Viral
Acharya, Deputy Governor of RBI, the incoming data - Goods and Services
Tax (GST), gross value added (GVA), commodity prices -- will be key to
shape the policy going forward.
"In parallel, the Reserve Bank is
examining options to improve the transmission of its policy rate actions
from banks to borrowers," Acharya said.
The next meeting of the MPC is scheduled on February 6 and 7, 2018.
22 Dec 2017, 01:58 PM