Rajan said that macroeconomic stability during the global turmoil cannot be risked and the government and RBI should continue to bring down inflation.
"As Brazil's experience suggests, the enormous costs of becoming an unstable country far outweigh any small growth benefits that can be obtained through aggressive policies. We should be very careful about jeopardising our single most important strength during this period of global turmoil - macroeconomic stability," he said here.
"Unfortunately, the growth multipliers on government spending at this juncture are likely to be much smaller, so more spending will probably hurt debt dynamics. Put differently, it is worth asking if there really are very high- return investments that we are foregoing by staying on the consolidation path?" he said.
Rajan said that consolidated fiscal deficit of the Centre and states rose to 7.2 per cent in 2015 from 7 per cent in the previous year.
The NDA government had last year deviated from the fiscal consolidation path, postponing reduction in fiscal deficit target by a year.
Rajan said deviation from the fiscal consolidation path
could push up government bond yields, both because of the greater volume of bonds to be financed and potential loss of government credibility on future consolidation.
Unfortunately, he added, despite the success on the inflation front there are voices suggesting weakening the fight against inflation.
He said: "Let me reiterate that macroeconomic stability relies immensely on policy credibility, which is the public belief that policy will depart from the charted course only under extreme necessity, and not because of convenience. If every time there is any minor difficulty, we change the goal posts, we signal to the markets that we have no staying power.
Macroeconomic stability, Rajan stressed, would be the platform on which "we will build the growth that will sustain our country for many years to come, no matter what the world does".
On the interest rate, he said, both industrialists and retirees overstate their case and the way to resolve their differences is to bring CPI-based, retail inflation steadily down.
Rajan also cautioned against raising tariffs to protect the domestic industries which are facing problems.
(Reopens DEL 60)
Rajan said that though RBI is in "fine fettle", the world today is much less comforting as industrial countries were still struggling, with a few exceptions, to grow.
"Our fellow BRICS all have deep problems, with confidence about China waxing and waning. Indeed, India appears to be an island of relative calm in an ocean of turmoil," he said.
Citing the example of Brazil, which is facing double digit inflation, Rajan said it is confronted with financial problems because it tried to grow too fast on the back of substantial stimulus.
"Of course, India is not in the same situation today. Given the inhospitable world economy and two successive droughts, either of which would have thrown the economy into a tail spin in the past, it is to the immense credit of the government that we have over 7 percent growth, low inflation, and a low current account deficit. But it is at such times that we should not be overambitious."
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