Twitter
Advertisement

Reserve Bank of India to unveil last monetary policy of FY20 on Thursday

With this, the sixth bi-monthly monetary policy statement for 2019-20 would be the last one for the current financial year.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will come out on Thursday (February 6) with its last monetary policy for the current financial year, i.e. FY20. This comes amid a slowing GDP growth rate and rising inflation in the country.

With this, the sixth bi-monthly monetary policy statement for 2019-20, which will be posted on the RBI website before noon on Thursday, would be the last one for the current financial year.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will meet during February 4-6 for the policy review, the RBI said in a release on Monday.

The government has estimated India's gross domestic product (GDP) to be growing at a slower pace of 5% in the current financial year on the back of various factors, domestic and global, including weakening consumer demand in the country.

In December, retail inflation also peaked to a five-year high of 7.3, mainly due to costlier vegetables, specifically onion and tomato.

The Economic Survey 2019-20 has projected the Indian economy to grow at around 6-6.5% in the next financial year beginning April 2020.

"With fiscal policy taking a growth-supportive role, on the back of monetary policy being ahead of the curve last year, the calibrated policy mix should bode well for growth.

"We look for the central bank to remain on an extended pause on rates (even as supply-induced shocks dissipate) but maintain an accommodative bias to ensure the cost of capital remains stable and favourable," Radhika Rao, senior vice-president and economist, DBS Group Research, said.

Crisil Ratings in its post-Union Budget 2020-21 comment has said, "Monetary policy has done its bit, but with moderate and slow success."

It added that the RBI cut the repo rate cumulatively by 135 basis points (bps) through calendar 2019, but lending rates tarried with just nearly 50-bps decline. "Even as credit demand has fallen, risk aversion and weak sentiment have affected the willingness to supply credit, too."

In its previous monetary policy review in December, the RBI had decided for a status quo, leaving the key repo -- the rate at which it lends to banks -- at 5.15%

 

(With PTI inputs)

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement