Interest rate hike to hurt India's growth prospects: Industry

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The industry today said 25 basis points rate hike by the RBI will hurt India's growth prospects and exhorted the to revert to the policy of benign interest rates.

However, a section from Inc said the decision of the Reserve (RBI) was a clear hint to the industry to push for growth by taking investment decisions, while some believe the central bank's hawkish stance is here to stay for a while.

The Reserve for the first time in four-and-half-years raised key today by 25 basis points to 6.25 per cent on inflation concerns arising from surge in international

"Given that inflation is being led by supply side issues, believes that raising would hurt growth while proving unequal to the task of tackling inflation," said.

He hoped that going forward, the RBI would reassess and revert to the policy of benign interest rates which would be growth supportive.

"Going forward, the hardening of scenario is here to stay at least in the short term, however much we may not like it," Secretary General D S Rawat said.

"The input cost pressures as highlighted by the RBI policy review would only increase for the exporters with the hiking of the repo rate by 25 basis points," engineering exporters' body said.

"The rate hike gives a clear hint to Inc to push for growth, take investment decisions as it can now foresee growth rate to pick up," said George Alexander Muthoot, MD, Muthoot Finance Limited.

Realtors' body Naredco's said the hike is justified on account of inflationary trends, global hardening of interest rates as also petroleum prices moving upwards.

"It will not make a major difference to However, in the long run, we would prefer rates coming down," he said.

said the Reserve Bank is likely to go for more rate hikes like the one today on risks from factors like the minimum support prices for farm produce and firm global commodity prices.

In the second bi-monthly for the current fiscal, the revised upwards the to 4.8-4.9 per cent in the first half of 2018-19, and 4.7 per cent in the second half.

It includes the impact from HRA for central government employees, with risks tilted to the upside.

With all the six members voting for a increase in policy rates, the Committee raised "repo rate by 25 basis points and kept the stance neutral", RBI said in a statement here.

Excluding the impact of HRA revisions, CPI-based inflation is projected at 4.6 per cent in first half of 2018-19, and 4.7 per cent in H2, RBI said.

RBI retained the GDP growth for the financial year 2018-19 at 7.4 per cent.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 06 2018. 17:30 IST