The policy decision will be announced at 11:45 a.m. in Mumbai, followed by a press conference 15 minutes later by Das.
Business
Standard : The Reserve
Bank of India is set to deliver a fifth straight interest rate
cut Friday, although economists are unsure of the quantum following
an unconventional 35 basis-point easing last time.
While
all 39 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News expect a reduction,
their forecasts range from 15 basis points to 40 basis points. The
RBI has lowered borrowing costs to a nine-year low of 5.4% through
110 basis points of easing so far in 2019.
The
meeting of the six-member Monetary
Policy Committee led by Governor Shaktikanta Das comes amid
growing concerns about India’s banking and financial sector, and
just weeks after Prime Minister Narendra Modi eased fiscal levers by
announcing a surprise $20 billion tax break for companies.
The
policy decision will be announced at 11:45 a.m. in Mumbai, followed
by a press conference 15 minutes later by Das.
Here’s
a look at what else to watch out for:
Growth
The
RBI has lowered its growth forecast for the current fiscal year three
times already, with the latest revision in August pegging growth at
6.9%. Data since has shown gross domestic product expansion slowing
to 5% in the June quarter, the weakest pace in six years. That may
prompt the central bank to revisit the numbers once again.
The
latest growth numbers “look much worse,” Das said recently,
referring to RBI’s projection of 5.8% expansion in the April-June
period. “There is a slowdown, which was evident and at the last MPC
we very clearly said that growth seems to be losing traction and
therefore, growth is a matter of highest priority.”
Inflation
A
recent spike in onion prices notwithstanding, headline inflation has
stayed below the RBI’s 4% medium-term target for 13 straight
months.
Food
and beverage prices, which account for about half of the consumer
price basket, have climbed on the back of a surge in urban food
inflation. Das has said gains in food inflation are cyclical and
there won’t be much pressure on prices, given monsoon rains appear
to be normal.
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