Inflation is being driven by supply-side problems and is likely to
stay elevated for a while, Mridul Saggar said
The Reserve
Bank of India has cut interest rates by “a great deal” and more policy
space can be created only when inflation eases, its executive director and
rate-panel member Mridul Saggar said.
Inflation is being driven by supply-side problems and is likely to stay
elevated for a while, he said at the Emerging Markets Central Banking Summit
organized virtually by the Washington-based Institute of International Finance.
Although food prices -- which contribute significantly to India’s inflation
basket -- are expected to correct significantly by December, he said it isn’t
easy to bring prices down under pandemic conditions.
His comments come
days before the inflation-targeting Monetary
Policy Committee’s next interest rate decision on Dec. 4. While consumer
prices above the RBI’s 2%-6% target band have forced policy makers to pause on
rate cuts, a looming recession has forced the rate-setters to weigh the need to
support economic growth.
Data due Friday
will probably show gross domestic product shrank 8.7% in the July-September
period, following a record 24% decline in the three months ended June, pushing
the economy into an unprecedented recession.
But Saggar
believes things may not be as bad as they appear. Nineteen of the 32
high-frequency indicators that he tracks have shown activity normalizing in the
virus-ravaged economy, he said.
In the absence of
robust fiscal support, the RBI has done the bulk of the heavy lifting for the
economy by cutting rates by 115 basis points so far this year and pumping billions
of dollars into the banking system.
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