India's Monetary Policy Committee, led by RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, kept the benchmark repo rate unchanged and also maintained its neutral stance.
Also Read: RBI MPC Highlights: 'Timing Of Actions Is Key', Says Das After Keeping Key Rates Unchanged
The MPC decided unanimously to retain the stance to ‘neutral’ and to remain unambiguously focused on a durable alignment of inflation with the target, while supporting growth.Shaktikanta Das, Governor, RBI
The MPC remains committed to retaining the growth-inflation balance in the overall interest of the economy.
Inflation Outlook
Inflation surged to exceed the RBI's target range of 4(+/-2)% but is expected to ease in the coming months, amid fresh market arrivals.
Lingering food price pressures are expected to keep prices elevated in the near term. Rabi crop outlook remains robust given early indications. Vegetable prices are also likely to see seasonal winter correction.
Going forward, food inflation is likely to soften in fourth quarter with seasonal easing of vegetables prices and kharif harvest arrivals; and good soil moisture conditions along with comfortable reservoir levels auguring well for rabi production.
Adverse weather events and rise in international agricultural commodity prices, however, pose upside risks to food inflation. Even though energy prices have softened in the recent past, its sustenance needs to be monitored.
Businesses expect pressures from input costs to remain elevated and growth in selling prices to accelerate from Q4.
Taking into account these factors, assuming a normal monsoon, CPI inflation is projected at 4.8% from 4.5% for fiscal 2025, Q3 at 5.7% from 4.8% earlier, and Q4 at 4.5% from 4.2%, with risks evenly balanced. For Q1 of fiscal 2026, inflation is projected at 4.6% from 4.3%, with Q2 at 4%.Shaktikanta Das, Governor, RBI
Growth Outlook
GDP growth came in at a seven-quarter low of 5.4% in the July-September quarter 2024 quarter. The decline was primarily led by deceleration in industrial GVA, Das said. Slowdown in high frequency indicators suggests bottoming out in the second quarter, he added. GDP growth is expected to see a pick-up in the second half of the fiscal.
Looking ahead, robust kharif foodgrain production and good rabi prospects, coupled with an expected pickup in industrial activity and sustained buoyancy in services augur well for private consumption.
Investment activity is expected to pick up.
Resilient world trade prospects should provide support to external demand and exports.
Headwinds from geo-political uncertainties, volatility in international commodity prices, and geo-economic fragmentation continue to pose risks to the outlook.
Taking all these factors into consideration, real GDP growth for 2024-25 is projected at 6.6%, compared to 7.2% previously, Q3 at 6.8% from 7.4%; and Q4 at 7.2% from 7.4%. Real GDP growth for Q1 FY26 is projected at 6.9% and 7.3% in Q2 FY26. The risks are evenly balanced.Shaktikanta Das, Governor, RBI
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

RBI’s Triple Surprise Is A Liquidity Lifeline, Say Experts


RBI MPC Preview: Rate Cut Of 25 Basis Points In Sight Amid Cooling Inflation

RBI's Monetary Policy Panel Starts Deliberations, Repo Rate Decision On Friday


What To Expect From RBI's June Monetary Policy Review And How To Prepare Financially
