Tuesday 23 April 2013

Inflation is the growth killer - and the RBI stifles it further through monetary policy


Last month, the Governor of the RBI, delivered a lecture at the London School of Economics on India's macroeconomic challenges in which he more or less admitted that RBI's monetary policy was largely to blame for declining growth in India. A large portion of the lecture focused on the huge inflation problem in India which as measured by the wholesale price index(WPI) was 9.6% in 2010/11, 8.9% in 2011/12 and 7.5% 2012/13. According to the RBI the major driver from the supply side has been food inflation, arising from rising incomes, especially in rural areas, which is leading to a shift in dietary habits from cereals to protein foods, the monsoon related spike in prices of food items such as vegetables and global commodity prices, especially the price of crude oil. The price of crude especially affects Indian inflation very badly since India imports 80% of its oil demand.



This commodity inflation is further compounded by the depreciation of the rupee and lack of demand adjustment due to the Indian governments subsidized pricing regime of petroleum products. But the worst growth killer of all has been RBI's response in the form of monetary policy as the Governor himself admits in his speech.

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