Industry chambers also expect the RBI to change its policy stance going forward and effect a rate cut to refurbish business sentiment and support domestic demand.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) left its benchmark lending rate unchanged at 6.25 per cent today for the third policy review in a row citing upside risk to inflation.
It, however, increased the reverse repo rate by 0.25 per cent to 6 per cent, narrowing the policy rate corridor.
"We are hopeful that going forward the RBI would shift its policy stance from neutral to accommodative and effect a cut in interest rates to refurbish business sentiment, support domestic demand and trigger the turn of the investment cycle," Banerjee said.
More From This Section
Assocham President Sandeep Jajodia said the focus of the RBI appears to be on liquidity management and anchoring inflationary expectations; thus growth impetus may not be its priority area.
"While 25 basis points rise in reverse repo rate should help their bottomline, a clear road map, coupled with strong political will is required to resolve the issue of burgeoning non-performing assets," Jajodia said.
"Given the inflation risks highlighted by the MPC, including the monsoon dynamics, increased allowances related to the pay commission, one-off impact of GST and global reflation risks, as well as the assessed trajectory of CPI inflation, the repo rate appears highly likely to be on hold during 2017," ICRA MD & Group CEO Naresh Takkar.