"What I am looking at is... Good monsoon, inflation coming down, and in the last quarter, there has been a 70-basis point reduction in headline interest rates, and with this (demonetisation), we would see a further drop in interest rates between now and say, 3-6 months, of another percentage point," he said.
Welcoming the move to withdraw the notes, Kamath said this in a medium term, in a year or so, will have a salutary effect on interest rates.
Unaccounted money coming out of the system will have a positive impact on inflation, he said, adding that the combined impact of all these would lead to at least 1 per cent cut in the interest rate.
He added that every hard step has some pain, which explains the current scenario.
Meanwhile, the government has taken various steps to ease pressure, including raising daily withdrawal limit from bank counters and ATMs as well as hiking the amount of old and now defunct currency notes that can be exchanged.
The weekly limit of Rs 20,000 for withdrawal from bank counters has been increased to Rs 24,000. The maximum limit of Rs 10,000 per day on such withdrawals has been removed.
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