"The decision of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is consistent with a neutral stance of monetary policy in consonance with the objective of achieving consumer price index (CPI) inflation at 5 per cent by Q4 of 2016-17 and the medium-term target of 4 per cent within a band of +/- 2 per cent, while supporting growth," it said.
Accordingly, the repo rate at which it lends to the system stands at 6.25 per cent and the reverse repo rate at which it absorbs excess liquidity is also retained at 5.75 per cent.
"The committee decided to change the stance from accommodative to neutral while keeping the policy rate on hold to assess how the transitory effects of demonetisation on inflation and the output gap play out," the resolution of the Monetary Policy Committee said.
In the last policy review in December, RBI had decided to keep policy rate unchanged.
The central bank also decided to form a separate enforcement department for stricter enforcement of its regulatory and supervisory actions.
At 6.25 per cent, the repo rate is already at a six-year low.
A majority of analysts in all pre-policy polls had said that RBI will go for a 0.25 percentage point cut in its key rates at the review. The analyst community, was however, not so sure of such actions further.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
