RBI on wait and watch mode on 7th Pay Commission : Media Reports
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan on
Tuesday announced its monetary policy review and left the key policy rate
unchanged. However, it indicated at a accommodative stance on inflation and
further rate cut. Rajan said with “inflation moving closer to the target” there
would be more room for rate cut to support growth.
However, the RBI also mentioned
about Seventh Central Pay Commission risks to the fiscal deficit, which was not
factored in the central bank’s inflation trajectory. Therefore, the RBI is in
‘wait n watch’ mode as to what government does in the Union Budget and what big
states are doing with their own state pay commissions (Punjab, UP, WB, Kerala
and Tamil Nadu – all election bound – and HP have already announced setting up
of their respective Pay Commissions, and likely to be followed by the
remaining).
“Inflation has evolved closely along
the trajectory set by the monetary policy stance. With unfavourable base
effects on the ebb and benign prices of fruits and vegetables and crude oil,
the January 2016 target of 6 per cent should be met,” Rajan said but added a
caveat on the impact of the seventh pay commission implementation on the price
index.
“Going forward, under the assumption
of a normal monsoon and the current level of international crude oil prices and
exchange rates, inflation is expected to be inertial and be around 5 per cent
by the end of fiscal 2017, ” RBI said.
“However, the implementation of the
Seventh Central Pay Commission award, which has not been factored into these
projections, will impart upward momentum to this trajectory for a period of one
to two years. The Reserve Bank will adjust the forecast path as and when more
clarity emerges on the timing of implementation,” Rajan said.
“As per our estimate, the Pay
Commission implementation by the Centre and state governments would lead to a
$50 bn fiscal stimulus over the next two years. The downside risks emanate from
softer global commodity prices and a normal monsoon. However, the RBI would
like to wait and watch as these factors play out over the next few months
before being in a position to recalibrate the glide path of inflation and
respond accordingly. We believe that the upside risks are marginally higher
than the downside risks as of now, and hence we do not see any policy rate cuts
in FY17,” said Jay Shankar, chief India economist & director, Religare
Capital Markets.
Source : http://www.financialexpress.com/
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