RBI\'s monetary policy committee highlights inflation spike risk\, signal rate hikes

RBI's monetary policy committee highlights inflation spike risk, signal rate hikes

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Sankalp Phartiyal

MUMBAI (Reuters) - The of India's monetary policy committee sees a risk of rising headline inflation from high crude and a weak rupee, indicating potential rate hikes ahead even as it held rates unchanged at its last meeting.

Minutes of RBI's monetary policy committee's (MPC) October meeting, released on Friday, showed most committee members highlighted the upside risks to inflation while preferring to wait for greater clarity on price pressures.

Five of six members had voted for keeping rates on hold at 6.50 percent, surprising most economists.

The panel also shifted its policy stance to 'calibrated tightening" from 'neutral'.

"The likelihood of remaining elevated rules out a rate cut anytime soon," RBI wrote in the minutes.

"Given the flexible inflation-targeting mandate of the MPC, it seems important to signal commitment to keeping to the mandate and move forward carefully at an appropriate time."

India's rose to 3.77 percent in September from 3.69 percent in August, the country's said last week.

Headline inflation for the first quarter of the fiscal year to March 2020 is projected at 4.8 percent compared with the mandated target of 4 percent.

The inflation outlook faces several upside pressures such as the effect of higher state-mandated prices of summer-sown crops, a rise in crude and increased volatility in financial markets of emerging economies, said.

Other risks include rising input costs, fiscal slippage at the federal or provincial levels and the effects of staggered house rental allowance revisions by state governments, he said.

Given inflation risks have been persistent, and to achieve the inflation target, "it is apposite to change the stance of monetary policy from neutral to calibrated tightening," Patel said.

Chetan Ghate, the only member to vote for a 25 basis points increase in the repo rate, said the appropriate "risk-management approach would be to act now" given the strong possibility of the "un-anchoring" of inflationary expectations.

(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal; Editing by and Toby Chopra)

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

First Published: Fri, October 19 2018. 20:17 IST