P Chidambaram, India’s new finance minister, wants to revive investment in the subcontinental economy by taking “carefully calibrated” risks. But the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has plenty of grounds to be wary. The main problem with stoking anaemic growth is that the tactics may also stoke inflation. Prices rose at their slowest pace in 32 months in July. But core inflation, excluding food and fuel, crept up. Cutting interest rates now would look like unsound monetary policy.
When it comes to asserting the independence of the Mumbai-based central bank from political masters in New Delhi, D Subbarao, governor of RBI, has large shoes to fill. His predecessor Y V Reddy had been an RBI deputy governor for six years and was at the International Monetary Fund in Washington before he returned to run the central bank. Distance from New Delhi allowed Reddy to chalk out a course that was often seen as adversarial by the finance ministry. The relationship between Reddy and Chidambaram, who was also the finance minister between 2004 and 2008, was sometimes stormy.
By contrast, the current governor was the top finance ministry bureaucrat when Chidambaram picked him to run the central bank. Saying no to a benefactor is hard. But Subbarao would do well to convince Chidambaram that untimely monetary easing could threaten stability. His case is strong. The RBI reduced the policy interest rate by half a percentage point in mid-April. Investors were spooked by the impact of this unexpected stimulus on the annual current account deficit, which had already widened to a record 4.2 per cent of GDP.
The central bank had to defend the rupee by selling dollars. Out of the $7.5 billion drop in India’s foreign-currency reserves this year, about 70 per cent has occurred in the past four months.
A rate cut now will disappoint investors and could be seen coming at the behest of Chidambaram, even if he plays no direct role. That would do further damage to the RBI’s credibility. Subbarao has no need to take that risk, calibrated or not.
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