To deal with the global financial crisis, many central banks around the world are printing money and reducing interest rates to very low levels. With countries like India offering high interest rates, significant foreign inflows have been witnessed in debt.
"A lot of that money is coming to us. We have got an avalanche of capital inflows.
"Our problem is: we also have high inflation, we cannot cut interest rates very quickly to the bone in order to tell those countries --- don't come here expecting high interest rates," the RBI Governor said, addressing the students of Guru Nanak College in central Mumbai this morning.
The RBI has in an agreement with government committed to using monetary tools to cut inflation to pre-decided levels.
The Monetary Policy Framework Agreement binds Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to using monetary policy tools including fixation of interest rates, to bring down inflation to less than 6 per cent by January 2016 and to around 4 per cent by March next year.
In January, overseas investors had pumped in Rs 33,688 crore in Indian debt and equities.
In 2014, the net investment by overseas investors in debt markets was Rs 1.59 lakh crore, while the figure for equities stood at Rs 97,054 crore. Overall net investment by foreign investors stood at Rs 2.56 lakh crore last year.
Rajan said high capital inflows have their own problems and warned that if a situation of currency depreciation were to arise, there can be problems for companies who have not hedged.
