Make it a non-event

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| There is very little in the macro-economic environment to warrant any change this time round. The most recent WPI release, reflecting the situation a couple of weeks ago, put inflation at 4.24 per cent, which should hardly cause concern to anybody. Of course, even if the underlying pressures remain muted, the number itself will go up over the next few weeks because of the base effect"" it was particularly low during the corresponding period of last year. However, that in itself is no reason for the RBI to take an active anti-inflationary stance. The fact is that the Indian economy has been able to grow at around 7 per cent or more for three years at a stretch without provoking significant inflationary pressures. To the extent that inflation has re-entered the policy debate during the last year, it is largely because of the sharp increase in oil prices. While the risks that oil prices will shoot up in the near future remain and have perhaps increased with the recent face-off between Iran and the western world over the nuclear issue, those eventualities can be dealt with as they happen. Meanwhile, domestic financial markets seem to be dealing with demand pressures exactly as they should, by gradual but unmistakable increases in interest rates. |
| From a global perspective, also, the tendency appears to be towards a wait-and-watch approach on the part of central banks. There are strong signals from the US Federal Reserve that it has more or less reached its target level for the federal funds rate and is unlikely to increase it further in a business-as-usual scenario. In fact, in the current scenario, in which rising oil prices are the most significant risk, a slowdown in growth is perhaps the more likely outcome over the next year or two. Concerns about this have already been aired on the basis of the inversion in the US yield curve""long-term rates being lower than short-term ones""that has taken place in recent weeks. Even if this possible slowdown is accompanied by rising inflationary pressures, it would be difficult to deal with it using the uni-dimensional instrument of interest rate increases. Taking all these factors into account, the best thing the RBI can do today is to make today's announcement truly a non-event. |
First Published: Jan 24 2006 | 12:00 AM IST