The special MPC meet convened in May 2022 marked a drastic shift in the stance of the MPC. With the 40 bps rate hike, the RBI is setting the stage for another 75 bps rate hike in the next two policy meets. That would effectively unwind the entire COVID largesse. As is the practice, the RBI published the minutes of the May 2022 MPC meeting after a fortnight on 18th May. Here is the gist of the discussions of the 6 members of the MPC.
Bhide has also pointed out that the growth indications from the high frequency indicators like PMI, GST collections and e-way bills were positive. However, it must also be noted that a lot of the GDP growth has been driven by exports and that is a function of high commodity prices. Hence, growth was recovering but still dependent on the commodity cycle. To curb inflation aggressively, Bhide voted for a 40 bps rate hike. He also voted to continue the accommodative stance, while applying other measures to absorb excess liquidity.
Goyal highlighted that the sharp rise in inflation in recent months had hit consumers. Hence, it was likely to have an impact on inflation expectations and push up inflation further. One way to pre-empt such a downstream effect is to front-load rate hikes so expectations on inflation are curbed. Goyal also focussed on the need to have a surprise effect in rate policy shifts, to avoid too much of overreaction. Goyal voted for a 40 bps rate hike and calibrated continuation of accommodative stance.
Varma highlighted that while the MPC had rightly prioritized accommodation at the height of the pandemic, it was behind schedule on raising rates. Ideally, Varma would have preferred a 50 bps rate hike with another 50 bps in June 2022, but decided to go with the consensus of 40 bps rate hike, instead of dissenting. However, Varma underlined the need to move faster as inflation had already risen more than the 40 bps rate hike.
Dr. Ranjan has justified a higher than 25 bps rate hike to anchor inflation expectations to more rational levels. However, he also reminded that the actual impact would be much higher since the RBI had decided to amplify the 40 bps rate hike with a 50 bps CRR hike. The 50 bps CRR hike is expected to soak up much of the surplus liquidity.
Patra highlights the risk of diverging from the US Fed on hawkishness. Such divergence poses a big challenge for Indian markets and for other EMs. Weak growth, high inflation and low rates create a negative real rates scenario and could trigger massive capital outflows. FPIs have already pulled out Rs2.10 trillion from India since October 2021.
What are the big takeaways? Firstly, this is the end of accommodation in any form. RBI will now take inflation head-on, above all else. Secondly, the RBI does not see early resolution to supply chain bottlenecks, which is the key factor driving imported inflation. Lastly, the RBI has opened the doors for two phases of rate hikes. While phase 1 will focus on getting repo rates back to pre-COVID levels; beyond that, phase 2 would be at the discretion of the RBI. It is now over to the RBI!
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