The MPC expects low levels of inflation to continue for a long period.
In
line with market expectations, the monetary
policy committee (MPC) decided to reduce the benchmark repo rate
by 25 basis points last week, to 6 per cent .
The
nudge came from low levels of consumer
price index (CPI) inflation, which remained below expectations.
Though the core CPI inflation rate dropped but remained high at 5.3
per cent in February, headline CPI inflation remained low—rising a
bit—to.
The
MPC expects low levels of inflation to continue for a long period. It
revised projections downward to 2.9-3.0 per cent in H1 FY20 and
3.5-3.8 per cent in H2 FY20.
Expected
growth in FY20 was subsequently revised downward from the initial
expectation of 7.4 per cent to 7.2 per cent. Many high frequency
indicators “suggest significant moderation in activity”, the MPC
noted.
It
is evident in the sustained contraction in auto production.
Households
too are expecting inflation to subside, with the three-month-ahead
and the one-year-ahead expectations declining by 40 basis points
Oil
showed a different picture, with the MPC underlining the rise in
global crude oil prices, which rose 10 per cent since the last policy
announcement in February.
Yet,
some macro indicators remained in the positive, with the investment
rate rising to 33.1 per cent of GDP in Q3 FY19 from 31.8 per cent of
GDP in Q3 FY18.
This was supported
by “the government’s thrust on the road sector and affordable
housing,” the MPC said. Capacity utilisation in industry rose to
its highest in the last six years.
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