"With the benefit of hindsight, I must admit in all honesty that the economy would have been better served if our monetary tightening had started sooner and had been faster and stronger," Subbarao said in his last public speech as the 22nd Governor of the RBI, as he delivered the 10th Nani A Palkhivala memorial lecture here this evening.
However, he said he had been taking the so-called "baby-steps" in real-time and not in hindsight.
"But remember, all this is hindsight whereas we were making policy in real-time, operating within the universe of knowledge at that time."
In this context, he also underlined the need for having faster and more reliable economic data for effective monetary policy calibration.
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The Governor poked fun at himself on the so-called "baby-steps", saying, "in fact, when I leave the Reserve Bank, I will be remembered as "baby-steps Subbarao."
Admitting that growth has moderated from over 9 per cent even after the crisis, he said it is unfair and inaccurate to blame it on tight monetary policy.
"I do not agree with the argument that the Reserve Bank failed to control inflation but only ended up stifling growth. Yes, growth has moderated, but to attribute all of that moderation to tight monetary policy would be inaccurate, unfair, and importantly, misleading as a policy lesson," and that the reasons for slowing economic activity are "a host of supply side constraints and governance issues, clearly beyond the purview of the Reserve Bank," the Governor said.