"The distinct downturn in both retail and headline inflation and soft inflationary scenario make a strong case for RBI to resume its accommodative policy stance and reduce interest rates even before the next monetary policy," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
"We expect that the decline in global commodity prices and better-than-expected trajectory of monsoon would prevent inflation from moving up during the year," he added.
"These numbers when looked at alongside figures of industrial performance make a good case for further cuts in the policy rate by RBI and we hope the central bank would continue moving in that direction," Ficci President Jyotsna Suri said.
Asserting that "promoting growth should take precedence at this juncture", Suri said at this point there is an imperative need to propel domestic demand on a sustainable basis that could lead to higher capacity utilisation and eventually more investments.
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"Drop in WPI, together with fall in the consumer price index (CPI) and the rise in industrial production presents a strong case for the RBI to consider an interest rate cut to push growth ahead of its scheduled policy review meeting," Assocham Secretary General D S Rawat said.
He said it remains to be seen as to how monsoon develops and what shall be its future impact on food prices as an uneven rainfall in some regions of the country may hit crops and could pile pressure on food inflation in the future.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan after the monetary policy announcement on August 4 had said the central bank may cut interest rate even out of the policy cycle depending on how macroeconomic indicators play out.
RBI mostly tracks the consumer price inflation for its policy decisions.