Food and beverages (F&B) make up about 45% of the weighting in the consumer price index (CPI), and F&B inflation has gone up from about zero (year-on-year) in early 2019 to about 8.7% in November. This has helped give an acceleration of the overall CPI inflation from about 3% to 5.5%. Many are worried about the outlook for monetary policy.
Even under ideal circumstances, monetary policy acts with a long lag. So when we think about the decisions of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), we should not respond with a lag to the information about the past, we need to peer into the future, into conditions in the economy in late 2020, because that is what monetary policy is useful in influencing.
An important element of the present inflation is vegetables. Vegetables have a 6% weighting in the CPI, and year-on-year inflation in November was 36%. But vegetables are characterised by rapid cycles of high and low prices. The time from sowing to harvest for a tomato, for example, is about 90 days. As a consequence, price changes rapidly kick off supply responses.
It is likely that this will happen again, now. High vegetable inflation in November will have kicked off a supply response, and in a few months, vegetable inflation will be back down to modest values. The main issue in thinking about monetary policy today is our forecast for CPI inflation in late 2020, and high values of vegetable inflation in November 2019 should not significantly alter our forecast for CPI inflation in late 2020.
These aspects were well understood in the design of the monetary policy framework. This is what gave the target zone, from 2% to 6%, rather than just a 4% target. We should hold the RBI accountable for delivering 4% CPI inflation, but expect that there will be fluctuations around this target within the specified range from 2% to 6%. Roughly speaking, when we see a CPI inflation outcome of below 2% or above 6%, we should know that mistakes were made a year or two earlier, and we should undertake a post mortem to better understand what went wrong, and how the processes can be improved.
There are many instruments of monetary policy, so it is important to look beyond headline monetary policy (the repo and the reverse repo rate). All the levers of monetary policy come together and shape conditions in the 91-day treasury bill. That interest rate is the best summary statistic about what monetary policy is doing. As the graph shows, in early 2018, the MPC felt that a tightening was required, and raised rates by about 100 basis points (bps). From this peak of 7%, there has been a strong easing of about 300 bps.
The de facto policy rate is thus at about 1% in real terms, which seems about right. There is a problem in the economy, where many borrowers are paying very high rates. This is a problem of financial policy, not monetary policy. There is headroom for cutting rates in the future, reflecting the difficulties of the economy, and I suspect we will see the policy rate go lower. But in the short run, changing the stance of monetary policy will not make a big difference to the places in the economy where very high interest rates are being paid.
Many interest rate assumptions, in the Indian economy today, are at values which are out of touch with the 4% inflation target. Administered rates of return need to be at 5%, i.e. 1% real, but they are at 8% to 9%. The nominal gross domestic product growth assumption that goes into the budget process, needs to come down to lower values, reflecting 4% inflation. Bringing down these values is immediately feasible, and will help significantly.
The problem of the economy is a reflection of weak business cycle conditions layered on top of a decline in trend growth. We had high trend growth from 1991 to 2011, but lower trend growth thereafter. Monetary policy is a useful lever for dealing with the business cycle fluctuations, but not the decline in trend growth. By and large, monetary policy today is on the right track, performing its function of delivering 4% year-on-year CPI inflation, which is the most that monetary policy can do. We should not be worried about the recent rise in inflation, or about the present conduct of monetary policy.
The writer is a professor at National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, New Delhi
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