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This Article is From Oct 08, 2018

India Monetary Policy: MPC Keeps Rates On Hold But Shifts Stance To “Calibrated Tightening”

India Monetary Policy: MPC Keeps Rates On Hold But Shifts Stance To “Calibrated Tightening”
A man drinks tea as he walks past the Reserve Bank of India headquarter building in Mumbai, India (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)  

India's monetary policy committee surprised markets by keeping interest rates unchanged, as it awaits for greater clarity on the evolving growth-inflation scenario in the economy. The six-member panel, however, changed its stance from 'neutral' to 'calibrated tightening', suggesting more rate hikes lie ahead.

Separately and importantly, in a measure which seemed to be aimed at curbing currency volatility, the Reserve Bank of India proposed a 'voluntary retention scheme' for foreign portfolio investors. The scheme offers increased investment flexibility to investors who choose to retain a portion of their investments in India for a time period of their choosing.

Key Takeaways

  • MPC keeps repo rate unchanged at 6.5 percent
  • MPC changes stance from neutral to 'calibrated tightening'
  • Repo rate kept unchanged by a 5-1 vote; Chetan Ghate voted for a rate hike
  • Stance changed by a vote of 5-1; Ravindra Dholakia voted for a neutral stance
  • RBI proposes voluntary retention route for FPIs in debt markets
  • Inflation projected at 3.9-4.5 percent in H2 and 4.8 percent in Q1 of financial year 2019-20
  • GDP growth seen at 7.4% in FY19 & 7.6% in FY20


In the press conference following the MPC decision announcement, RBI Governor Urjit Patel said “It is important to recognise that close to a decade-long extraordinary accommodation by systemic central banks is finally tapering off”.

This inevitable normalisation coupled with the risks stated above has resulted in several quantity and price adjustments in global financial markets. Global trade, according to latest WTO data, is losing pace possibly on account of ongoing tariff wars. In emerging markets, currency depreciation imposed additional upside inflation risk besides the contagion risks of a technical nature from specific EM episodes and geopolitical developments.
Urjit Patel, Governor, RBI

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