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CRR, repo rate raised

Oommen A. Ninan

Bank loans may become dearer


Increase in CRR expected to shore up another Rs. 9,000 crore

GDP growth projection for 2008-09 revised to around 8 per cent



MUMBAI: In a move to curtail surging inflation and inflationary pressures, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday tightened the liquidity in the system by raising the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) of banks by 25 basis points to 9 per cent and the short-term indicative rate (repo rate) by 50 basis points to 9 per cent.

The increase in CRR — the portion of deposits banks must keep aside — with effect from August 30 is expected to shore up another Rs. 9,000 crore from the banking system. Repo rate is the rate at which the RBI lends money to banks.

These hikes are a clear signal for banks to increase their lending rates; and loans for housing, cars and personal purpose will be dearer. The RBI undertook aggressive monetary tightening measures as the global pressure on inflation from primary commodities and crude prices are not expected to ease soon. The RBI had hiked the repo rate by 125 basis points and the CRR by 150 basis points since April.

RBI priorities

The RBI also revised the GDP growth projection for 2008-09 from 8.0-8.05 to around 8 per cent, barring domestic or external shocks. Pointing out that price stability and anchoring inflationary expectations were the priorities of the central bank while it maintained growth momentum, RBI Governor Y.V. Reddy said, “Exaggerated bearishness is as dangerous as exaggerated bullishness. We are emphasising a lot on inflation but underplaying growth.” Dr. Reddy was addressing a press conference to announce the RBI’s first quarter review of the Annual Monetary Policy for 2008-09.

Realistic policy

While the policy actions would aim to bring down the “current intolerable level of inflation to a tolerable level of below 5 per cent as soon as possible and around 3 per cent over the medium term,” Dr. Reddy said that at this juncture a realistic policy endeavour would be to bring down inflation from 11-12 per cent to a level close to 7 per cent by March 31, 2009.

On domestic oil prices, the RBI Governor said, “We are not expecting any pass-through of global oil prices to domestic prices in the current financial year.”

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