A hike for sure?

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| However, there are several factors worth considering and they suggest otherwise. One, it is now quite clear that the US Federal Reserve has come to the end of its rate hike cycle. The next change, when it comes, is more likely to be a reduction than an increase. It appears that the series of hikes in the federal funds rate, its primary instrument, has had the desired effect; while inflation is under control, growth is becoming a little sluggish, suggesting an end to the hikes. The Bank of Japan has followed suit. The European Central Bank did raise its rate recently, but then, it, along with the Bank of England, practises inflation targeting, which is a commitment to keeping inflation below a certain ceiling, regardless of what this may do to growth. One would expect central banks that follow this approach to be a little more trigger-happy with interest rates. Two, oil prices appear to be moving downwards with some degree of predictability, driven obviously by an anticipated slowing of growth in the US and uncertainty about what OPEC will achieve by way of a production cut. A US slowdown certainly presages global moderation of all commodity prices, reinforced by the impact of slowing exports to the US from the Asian economies. All this suggests that, whatever else may be happening in the domestic economy, the threat of inflation will significantly decline over the coming months. |
| So, what is the RBI going to do? Recent pronouncements and actions suggest that it will opt for discretion and give more weight to domestic factors, which suggest overheating, and less to global ones, which suggest moderation. In short, a hike is the likely announcement on October 31. However, it should, in the process, keep in mind that its current growth outlook for the year is underestimated and communicate to the markets an updated view of the sustainable growth-inflation combination for the economy. The extent of overheating will not seem so significant then. |
First Published: Oct 17 2006 | 12:00 AM IST