India’s economic growth slowed to a decade low of 5 percent in the 2012/13 financial year. In the fourth quarter of the 2012 calendar year – the equivalent of the third quarter of the fiscal year – Gross Domestic Product expanded by 1.3 percent for annual growth of 4.5 percent, down from 5.3 percent in the third quarter, and well below growth rates of over 9 percent in early 2010.
In addition to the cut in the repo rate, the RBI said the reverse repo rate, which is set with a spread of 100 basis points below the repo rate, would be adjusted to 6.25 percent while the marginal standing facility rate, with is set 100 basis points above the repo rate, would be set at 8.25 percent.
The Bank Rate would be set at 8.25 percent while the cash reserve ratio (CRR), which some economists had expected could be cut, was retained at 4.0 percent. The CRR – the proportion of deposits that banks have to keep in cash at the RBI – was cut by 25 bps in January to its current level.
The drop in inflation in March had boosted hopes for a rate cut along with statements by the RBI’s chief economic advisor, Raghuram Rajan, who said there was scope for interest rate cut as inflation has come down and there is a need to push growth.
In its review of macroeconomic and monetary developments in 2012/13, which ended March 30,
the RBI had already said the room to cut interest rates further was very limited in light of “headline inflation remaining above the threshold and consumer price inflation remaining high.”
The review, which was released yesterday as a backdrop to the RBI’s rate-setting meeting, also said headline inflation was likely to remain range-bound in 2013/14 with some moderation in the first half due to subdued pricing power by producers and falling global commodity prices before rising in the second half due to base effects.
The RBI’s own survey of forecasters shows growth recovering in 2013/14 to 6.0 percent from 5.0 percent in 2012/13 and average WPI inflation easing to 6.5 percent from 7.3 percent.
India’s current account deficit is “by far the biggest risk to the economy” the RBI said.
The current account deficit is likely to ease in the fourth quarter of the 2012/13 financial year due to lower imports and a pick up in exports after a record high of 6.7 percent of GDP in the third quarter. For the full year, the deficit is expected to be around 5.0 percent of GDP, “twice the sustainable level,” the RBI said in its economic review.
India is one of the few countries worldwide to suffer from inflationary pressure during the current phase of weak economic growth. In 2012 inflation slowed markedly across much of Asia, except for India , Indonesia, and to a lesser extent Thailand, according to the International Monetary Fund’s latest regional outlook.
The IMF forecasts India’s inflation to be the second highest in Asia this year, only surpassed by Mongolia. Even Vietnam, which has been struggling with inflation, is forecast to cut inflation this year to 8.8 percent from 2012’s 9.1 percent.
Measured by consumer prices, India’s inflation rate is expected to average 10.8 percent this year, up from 9.3 percent in 2012, and then hit 10.7 percent in 2014.
“Inflation is expected to remain generally within central banks’ explicit or implicit comfort zones, with the notable exception of India,” the IMF said.
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