Read Editorial with D2G – Ep (283)

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Prudence amid uncertainty

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For the first time in six meetings this fiscal (relating to government revenue, especially taxes), the Reserve Bank of India has shifted its policy poise (balance; control), moving to ‘neutral’ from an ‘accommodative’ stance (attitude). The central bank’s Monetary Policy Committee has opted to sit pat (touch quickly) on rates and choose to give itself time to “assess how the transitory (temporary) effects of demonetisation on inflation and the output gap play out”. The decision came just a day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Parliament that the government’s move to withdraw high-value currency notes had been undergirded (provide support or a firm basis for) by the premise (property) that the economy was “doing well and thus our decision was taken at the right time”.

The RBI’s emphasis (special importance, value) on caution suggests that not only has the economy suffered short-run disruptions (disturbance or problems which interrupt an event, activity, or process) — as the central bank said in December — but that the long-term impact may be far more enduring (lasting over a period of time; durable) and hard to predict than anticipated (expect or predict). The policy statement issued by the six-member MPC also projected the second successive downward revision in economic growth as measured by the Gross Value Added for the current year ending in March, with the pace of increase in GVA now forecast at 6.9%, from 7.1% in December and 7.6% prior to the November demonetisation.

Separately, both the outlook for inflation and international uncertainty are also causes for concern, according to the RBI. Viral Acharya, the recently inducted (admit (someone) formally to a post or organization) Deputy Governor overseeing monetary policy, flagged the risks that global inflation and a strengthening U.S. dollar pose to domestic price gains. Specifically, the central bank is worried about the “unyielding” nature of core retail inflation (a general increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money), which strips out food and fuel costs, and has been stuck around 4.9% since September, mainly due to stickiness in price gains for housing, health, education, personal care and household services.

The MPC reckons (be of the opinion) that the “persistence of inflation excluding food and fuel could set a floor on further downward movements in headline inflation and trigger second-order effects” that, when combined with hardening international crude oil and base metal prices and exchange rate volatility (liability to change rapidly and unpredictably, especially for the worse). It could have the potential to threaten the RBI’s baseline inflation path of 4.5% to 5% in the second half of 2017-18. And ironically, were the effects of demonetisation to wear off quickly, vegetable prices, that had softened on the back of distress sales of perishables  (to decay or go bad quickly), could potentially rebound, posing another risk to the central bank’s inflation outlook. As Mr. Acharya summed it up at the post-policy briefing, the RBI has plumped (overweight) for prudence (cautiousness) and flexibility.