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RBI moves to contain inflation without hurting growth

Aiming to tackle inflationary pressures, the Reserve Bank today increased a key statutory deposit ratio for banks by one percentage point to 25 per cent but the move is not expected to push interest rates up. - Capital inflows lessen external sector blues - Hike in SLR not to have significant impact, say top bankers - GDP likely to grow by 6.5-6.75%: FM - RBI review in line with govt thinking: FM - Interest rates likely to stay stable for 3-4 months: Bankers - RBI gives positive signal to economy: Fin Secy Barring the hike in Statutory Liquidity Ratio, the deposits that commercial banks are to park in government securities, the central bank left other key policy rates and ratios unchanged. Although the one percentage point hike in SLR could suck up over Rs 30,000 crore from the system, the average SLR of banks is already at 27.6 per cent. "As such the increase in SLR will not impact the liquidity position of the banking system and credit to the private sector," RBI Governor D Subbarao said, releasing the second quarterly review of the Monetary Policy. Maintaining the easy credit flow to the private sector would help increase economic activity. RBI retains economic growth projection to six per cent with upward bias for the current fiscal, while upping inflation estimate to 6.5 per cent with upward bias by March end from five per cent earlier. "As always the Reserve Bank will endeavour to ensure price stability and anchor inflation expectations," the central bank said. IDBI Bank Executive Director Sushil Munot said the signal is quite clear that RBI does not want to hurt growth, but wants to check inflation. It is nevertheless a signal of reversal of easy monetary policy. The central bank kept repo-rate at which banks borrow from RBI in exchange of government bonds at 4.75 per cent, reverse-repo at which the apex bank accepts deposits from banks at 3.25 per cent and Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR), the portion of cash banks park with the Reserve Bank, at 5 per cent -- all unchanged. Taking a cue from RBI"s monetary policy stance, banks are unlikely to hike their auto, home and education loans in the near term. However, credit flow to commercial real estate may be affected as the RBI raised the requirement for banks to keep the money aside while lending to this sector from 0.40 per cent to one per cent. It means banks will have to keep Re one aside for every Rs 100 lent to commercial real estate against 40 paise now. "In view of large increase in credit to commercial real estate sector over the last one year and the extent of restructured advances in the sector, it would be prudent to build cushion against likely non-performing assets," Subbarao said. The GDP growth projection for FY"10 has been pegged at 6 per cent, same as earlier, assuming a modest decline in agriculture production and a faster recovery in industrial production," the RBI said. On inflation, the RBI said, "the base effect, which resulted in negative WPI-inflation till August, is now expected to work in the reverse direction accentuated by high food prices."


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