India Inc today said a cut in key rates by the Reserve Bank would have been propitious for growth, even as it hailed the central bank's move to slash SLR, saying it will give more room to banks for onward lending to the corporate sector.
The industry also emphasised on supply-side interventions by the government to tackle persistently high food inflation.
"While we expect the government to attack food inflation through administrative and policy fixes from the supply-side, we would have appreciated the central bank facilitating a revival of capital expenditure cycle by exhibiting a softer stance on policy rates," Ficci President Sidharth Birla said.
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"CII recognises the concerns about inflation that have restrained RBI from reducing key policy rates but by easing liquidity in the system by lowering SLR it has ensured that funds would be available to the banking sector for onward lending which in turn would push investment and growth," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
The repo rate, at which the Reserve Bank of India lends to banks, has been retained at eight%, while the statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) for banks has been cut by 0.5% to 22.5% with effect from June 14.
However, Assocham President Rana Kapoor said: "While SLR cut by 50 bps will make available a little more money for lending by banks, the issue facing the industry at this point of time is not so much of liquidity but the cost of borrowing. With robust foreign inflows, the system has ample liquidity".
The cash reserve ratio for banks has been kept unchanged at four%.
"A reduction in the SLR will give banks more freedom to expand credit to the non-government sector," PHD Chamber of Commerce President Sharad Jaipuria said.
The RBI has increased the key repo rate three times since Rajan took over as Governor in September last year.
India's economic growth stayed below five% for the second year in a row at 4.7% in 2013-14 and growth remained subdued at 4.6% in the fourth quarter.