Business | Economy
India lifts rates in inflation fight
India's central bank raised interest rates for the second time this month and asked lenders to set aside more money as reserves to cool inflation running at a 13- year high.
New Delhi: India's central bank raised interest rates for the second time this month and asked lenders to set aside more money as reserves to cool inflation running at a 13- year high.
The repurchase rate was lifted to 8.5 per cent from 8 per cent and the cash reserve ratio to 8.75 per cent from 8.25 per cent, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in a statement issued in Mumbai yesterday. The move comes after the central bank increased its repurchase rate by a quarter percentage point to 8 per cent on June 11.
Governor Yaga Venugopal Reddy is under pressure from the finance ministry to tighten monetary policy to rein in inflation, currently at 11.05 per cent. That will further hurt consumer and investment demand and threatens to derail India's record 8.8 per cent economic growth since 2003, the fastest after China among the world's major economies.
"A tight monetary stance will have to continue for another year to slow inflation to the desired level," said Rajiv Kumar, a former policy adviser in the fin-ance ministry between 1992 and 1995 who is now the director of the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations.
"Growth could come down to as low as 6.5 per cent by 2010." He spoke before the central bank's rate announcement.
With general elections scheduled to be held in less than a year, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh wants to control prices in a country where more than half the population of 1.1 billion live on less than $2 a day.
Finance Secretary D. Subbarao said on June 21 that monetary policy is the "first line of defence" as the government tries to rein in prices before elections by May.
"High prices will most definitely result in aggressive monetary tightening, even at the cost of lower growth, making things all the more unenviable for the government," said Rohini Malkani, a Mumbai-based economist at Citigroup. "With inflation likely to remain at elevated levels for the rest of the year, political parties have started positioning themselves for the next elections."
India's inflation rate has almost tripled this year, eroding the popularity of Singh's ruling Congress party, which lost ground in nine of 11 state elections since January 2007.
India "will continue to take determined and calibrated measures as and when warranted," Reddy said in the western city of Pune on June 23. Bonds gained after Reddy's comments on optimism the central bank will rein in prices.
Traders expect the rupee to rise from near a 14-month low to reduce the import cost of fuel, food and other products.
Before yesterday, Reddy had raised the repurchase rate eight times in the past two-and-a-half years and increased the cash reserve ratio seven times since December 2006 to slow money supply and cool inflation.
Inflation is accelerating across Asia as crude oil and raw material costs climb, forcing governments from Indonesia to Sri Lanka to cut subsidies and let regulated fuel prices increase.
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