Reference Text
Time Left10:00
With
crucial
polls
ahead,
India's
central
bank
may
not
be
done
yet
with
monetary
tightening
For
the
second
time
in
six
weeks,
the
Monetary
Policy
Committee
of
the
RBI
raised
its
key
policy
rate,
the
repo
rate,
by
25
basis
points,
to
6.5
per
cent
this
time,
with
five
of
its
six
members
voting
in
favour.
A
rate
hike
had
appeared
inevitable
with
the
rise
in
headline
inflation
from
4.6
per
cent
in
June,
an
uptick
in
household
inflation
expectations,
both
from
a
near
term
and
one
year
horizon,
captured
by
the
RBI's
survey
and
the
risk
of
future
inflation
after
the
government's
decision
to
increase
MSPs
for
kharif
crops
for
the
2018
19
sowing
season,
and
fiscal
slippages.
The
MPC
reckons
that
the
higher
MSP,
which
is
larger
than
the
average
increase
in
the
last
few
years,
could
have
a
direct
impact
on
food
inflation
and
second
round
effects
on
headline
inflation
though
much
will
hinge
on
the
level
of
procurement.
The
other
concern
relates
to
volatile
crude
oil
prices
and
fiscal
slippages
both
at
the
federal
and
state
levels.
For
the
central
bank,
which
is
legally
mandated
to
maintain
inflation
at
close
to
the
4
per
cent
mark,
the
primary
objective
would
be
to
meet
that
goal.
Not
raising
rates
wasn't
really
an
option
considering
the
possible
dent
to
its
institutional
credibility
and
the
fact
that
the
benchmark
yield
on
10
year
bonds
is
now
close
to
8
per
cent
and
the
yield
differential
between
the
one
year
and
10
year
bond
is
already
high
at
over
75
basis
points.
Not
that
the
25
basis
points
increase
in
rates
will
make
a
significant
difference
given
the
directional
shift.
That
is
reflected,
for
instance,
in
market
leader
SBI
increasing
its
rates
on
its
term
deposits
and
lower
bond
issuances.
The
RBI
isn't
alone.
Globally,
many
central
banks
have
been
on
a
tightening
course
Philippines,
like
India,
has
had
to
raise
rates
to
contain
inflation
while
others,
including
Indonesia,
Argentina,
Brazil
and
Turkey,
were
forced
to
stem
outflows
in
the
face
of
a
resurgent
US
dollar
and
to
support
their
own
currencies.
It
may
well
be
that
the
recent
lowering
of
GST
rates
on
nearly
100
goods
and
services
could
have
a
moderating
impact
on
inflation
but
that
would
depend
on
firms
passing
on
the
benefits
of
lower
rates
to
retail
consumers.
A
pick
up
in
economic
activity
and
indications
in
the
RBI's
own
survey
of
a
robust
manufacturing
sector
in
the
second
quarter
have
prompted
the
MPC
to
retain
its
growth
forecast
for
this
fiscal
at
7.4
per
cent.
With
national
and
crucial
state
polls
a
few
months
down
the
line,
the
counter
to
any
fiscally
expansionist
policy
invariably