Showing posts with label RBI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RBI. Show all posts

Inflation, Monetary policy and India

 The minutes of the recent meeting of Monetary Policy Committee  of RBi which were released this week, contain some interesting mentions. One of the news columns said that RBI minutes mention 'uncertainty' 12 times, 'growth' 43 times and 'inflation' 147 times It has expressed concern over inflation and it seems to be valid as CPI has remained above 6% which is more than the tolerance limit of RBI. Alongside, India is experiencing severe GDP growth pangs as its IIP has remained in the negative territory in the first quarter and in July also. Services sector is in a deeper mess except of course ITES, SAAS etc. which have been affected to a lesser extent. It looks like only Agri sector has not been impacted adversely so far ,as the progress of monsoon has been satisfactory and the spatial dispersion also fairly good.


The RBI Deputy Governor Mr.Michael Patra had said : "If inflation persists above the upper tolerance band for one more quarter, monetary policy will be constrained by the mandate to undertake remedial action, including an immediate and more than a proportionate response to head off the build-up of inflation pressures and prevent it from getting generalized." So, to sum it up ,we have classic case of "stagflation"- a combo of GDP slowdown and inflation.!

CPI in India has a higher weightage for food and fuel indices and these two are certainly not amenable to monetary policy measures. In India fuel price is driven more by Govt . policy measures and it is feeding into inflation with its rippling effects on the rest of the economy widespread.When pandemic is restricting economic activities profiteering becomes rampant in vegetable and food prices. When the supply chain and free movement of people and commodities happen, the inflation tendencies will come down. Cost push inflation of food prices will not listen to monetary policy signals in the short term in Indian conditions. As India is driven more by cash , there is a quite a lag in food inflation responding to monetary policy measures, if at all it is significant. May be hoarding and black marketing of these vegetables,cereals ,staples etc. may come down a little bit.However Govt. initiatives through Essential commodities and anti-hoarding sticks used by Govt. through other means incl. emergency imports may be more effective in the short term to bring down food prices.

When the economy is awash with liquidity, the prices in general have tendencies to go north .More so when the supply constraints remain elevated due to lockdowns,e-passes and uncertainties compounded by fear for life and livelihood affecting the income. In these circumstances. RBI should look at high CPI as extraordinary during the pandemic period and should start looking at Core inflation now and then revert back to CPI only after the pandemic is seen plateauing.In the meantime, RBI may seek a temporary amendment for its inflation targeting, switching to Core inflation in times of extraordinary circumstances like a pandemic,global financial crises etc. and then have a glide path back to CPI inflation targeting after the crest of the crises is over.

RBI monetary policy and the state of the Indian economy

 RBI's recent Monetary Policy announcement after MPC considered the latest economic factors, CPI etc , came out with no repo rate cut. Primarily because CPI is elevated and at an uncomfortable level as far as RBI is concerned.since the mandated and stated objective of RBI is now inflation control, RBI has decided to hold the rate this time despite the economic slowdown calling for a steep rate cut.RBI also mentioned that this year would see real GDP contraction after more than four decades, but still decided to save the powder for a more rainy day or for a day when the bang will be worth its buck.


India is facing rising prices also esp. food prices, fuel prices and therefore is experiencing a cost push inflation. There is a school of economists who say the inflation is fueled by easy liquidity floating in the economy and the stock exchange boom , gold price rise all indicate to easy money into areas where some quick money can be made.Even RBI is predicting a rise in inflation levels in Q2 but has refrained from an inflation forecast.

Gold price,as Ruchir Sharma in today's TOI blog(link )puts it, rises due to uptick in demand whenever interest rate is lower than the inflation rate. But Gold being a safe haven investment booms when the rest of the economy sees more volatility elsewhere esp. in stable investments. There is a rush of outflow from equity MFs in July but is it going to Debt MFs or to stock market or to gold  is anybody's guess.But there is greater desperation driving up buying Gold rather than preference as an investment.

All this paint a confusing story but with tinges of liquidity bulge which may become an inflation down the road, unless the productive resources are used for assets and jobs creation. But the silverlinings are shallow oil prices, decent monsoon, burgeoning foreign exchange reserves and surplus in current account balance. So, cost push factors in inflation are slightly mitigated in the near to short term.

CII 's recent 111th Business Outlook survey,July 2020, which was released last month revealed that out of three indeces Current situation index, Expectation index, Business confidence index, the Current Situation Index of Q1 of Fy 20-21 is similar to the levels of Q4 of Fy 19-20! Only the Expectations and Business Confidence levels in the economy have deteriorated during Q1 of Fy 20-21 as compared to earlier quarter.

Dr.Manmohan Singh in his BBC interview has also clearly said that this human crisis created by the pandemic calls for greater spending and greater borrowings by the GOI, even upto another 10% of GDP for tackling health, military and economic challenges of the country. His wise words would be worthy of listening now.(link)

But this borrowing must have a clear exit clause linking it to FRBM Act requirement of glided fiscal deficit path to 3% of GDP eventually in the short to medium term of 3/4 years. Only this can bring back investors into the country. Otherwise Fiscal profligacy is the scourge of the growing economies like India.

There are no simple answers but quick actions,as outlined by PM in his speech on the occasion of  Ram janmasthan Temple laying foundation,have to be taken by the Govt. Quoting from Kamba Ramayana he said "காலம் தாழ ஈண்டு இனும் இருத்தி போலாம்" என்றான் இராமன்" which essentially means we should not procrastinate taking actions to rectify the situation. A well focused fiscal stimulus, vaccine or no vaccine, is an urgent imperative.






RBI consumer confidence survey of May 2020 and getting the common man's dreams back.

RBI consumer confidence survey was done in May 2020, which came out a few days back paints a dark picture of consumer confidence. It has hit rock bottom so far.link. Whether it will hit another bottom is a moot point.

According to RBI Consumer confidence collapsed in May with the Current Situation Index (CSI) touching a historic low of 63.7 dipping from 85.6 in March 20. One year ahead Future Expectations Index entered the zone of pessimism at 97.9 for the first time after Modi govt. took charge, falling from 115.2 just two months ago.

These are all negative news, but as expected. However these are lag news and therefore markets looking for lead indicators ignored this. We all now know that Covid 19 has wreaked havoc on our economic health more than what it could do to people health.

But there are several silver linings like not many people do not expect price levels to go up. If we discount the "recency bias" in their opinions and perceptions,I still find 14.4 % people saying in May 2020 that the economy has improved. We must also keep the date of survey and context in our minds. The survey date is between  May 5-17 and in the midst of Covid fear, with lakhs of migrant workers walking and shown endlessly 24x7 in TV news. Sometimes I wondered how come with so many trains and buses being stopped which were all running overcrowded, people are managing commuting and travelling. Our media has put a little spin and exaggeration to this by labelling every traveller on foot a migrant labourer leaving for his native place. Every reporter worth his salt with a mike on hand interviewed every single person on foot asking whether he was migrant labour and everyone being asked acknowledging it. Now I understand that all those trains and buses running daily are only for migrant labourers!! That is beside the point.

Coming back to my point that almost 14.4% of people still finding that the economy has improved is a testimony to the confidence of the people on the Govt. Govt has rightly acted with alacrity by announcing Rs.21 lac crore bundled package which will make  supply-side fire on all cylinders. All of us agree that it is the supply side which needs time to pick and put all its pieces together. But the confidence and speed with which Supply-side can get back on its feet, essentially depends on its perception of demand perking up. The demographic dividend is a major contributor to the demand but Future Expectations Index indicator is a proxy for this perception by the Supply-side. When FEI is weak, it is time for the Govt. to understand that income levels are falling and people are losing faith in the strength of the economy. This pessimism will damage the Supply-side booster shots going waste unless the perception is reversed quickly. Opening up of the economy after lockdown will itself augur optimism but sustaining it depends on Demand-side actions by the Govt. To kickstart a flagging economy, the man on the street who is the ultimate consumer must get his job back, his income back and basically his dreams about the future back.

Govt must work for getting his dreams back without losing time. Cut  Auto sector GST, for a start.




Passenger vehicles sales trend is encouraging for the Economy

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