According to law, the RBI has a mandate to keep inflation at 4 per cent, within a band of 2 per cent on either side. Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in March 2020, the central bank’s effort has been to stay within the band of 2-6 per cent.
The six-member monetary policy committee unanimously decided to keep the policy repo rate at 6.5 per cent.
“Our target and our endeavour is to see that headline inflation aligns with the target on a durable basis. The primary target of monetary policy is 4 per cent. During the stressful times of Covid and thereafter when the Ukraine war broke out and the fall out of war, we operated within the band…we used the flexibility which is available to MPC, so operated within that band. We were tolerant of inflation above 4 per cent and our effort was to keep it below 6 per cent,” Das said.
The signal to return to 4 per cent inflation was interpreted as hawkish by the market as reflected in the bond yields which inched up. The yield on the 10-year benchmark government bond went up 4 bps to close the day at 7.02 per cent.
The central bank has revised the FY24 inflation forecast slightly lower to 5.1 per cent, as compared to 5.2 per cent projected during the April policy review.
“Given the uncertainties around the impact of El Niño conditions leading to sub-par monsoon in 2023, the RBI remained cautious and revised the inflation projection by only 10 bps to 5.1 per cent for FY24. The RBI governor stressed on moving towards the primary target of 4 per cent inflation,” said Dhiraj Relli, managing director and chief executive officer, HDFC Securities.
“In this backdrop, expectation of a rate cut in this calendar year seems to have faded. We expect the first rate cut perhaps in February 2024,” Relli said.

