RBI keeps lending rate
unchanged at 6.25%
In its first monetary policy review in 2017, on February 8, the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI) has decided to keep key rates unchanged.
Accordingly, the repo rate at which it lends to the R
In its first monetary policy review in 2017, on February 8, the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI) has decided to keep key rates unchanged.
Accordingly, the repo rate at which it lends to the system stands at
6.25% and the reverse repo rate at which it absorbs excess liquidity is
also retained at 5.75%. In the last policy review in December, the RBI
had decided to keep policy rate unchanged. At 6.25%, the repo rate is
already at a six-year low.
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) also decided to change the stance
from ‘accommodative’ to ‘neutral’ while keeping the policy rate on hold,
to assess how the transitory effects of demonetisation on inflation and
the output gap play out.
“The decision of the MPC is consistent with a neutral stance of monetary policy in consonance with the objective of achieving consumer price
index (CPI) inflation at 5% by Q4 of 2016-17 and the medium-term target
of 4% within a band of +/- 2%, while supporting growth,”
The
MPC said it is ‘committed to bringing headline inflation closer to 4.0%
on a durable basis and in a calibrated manner’ and this requires further
‘significant decline in inflation expectations, especially since the
services component of inflation that is sensitive to wage movements has
been sticky’.
How are home loan rates charged by banks and housing finance
companies
RBI governor Urjit Patel also cut the economic growth forecast to 6.9%
for the current fiscal, from 7.1% estimated earlier, even as he said
that the economy will bounce back to 7.4% next fiscal. The central bank
also decided to form a separate enforcement department for stricter enforcement of its regulatory and supervisory actions.
A majority of analysts in all pre-policy polls had said that RBI will go
for a 0.25 percentage point cut in its key rates at the
The
factors which were pushing the case for a rate cut included inflation being under control at 3.3% for December and under 4% in January,
pushing growth prospects the demonetisation impact and also a
commitment from the government to keep the fiscal deficit at 3.2% for
the next fiscal. However, core inflation staying put and not showing
signs of decline, a possible increase in oil prices following decisions
by the OPEC and further hardening of rates in the US, were some of the
factors that prevented the RBI from lowering the lending rate
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