RBI has room for more rate cuts, but with caution, says rate panel member
Saugata Bhattacharya, an external member of India's rate-setting panel, suggests India has scope for further rate cuts due to declining inflation and growth uncertainties. However, he advises a cautious and calibrated approach to policy easing. Bh...

"Going forward, continuing policy easing - both rate cuts and liquidity infusions - could eventually alter the growth-inflation balance, especially as growth recovery begins to approach potential levels, thereby increasing inflationary pressures," Saugata Bhattacharya said in an interview.
"I think we are still some time away from this," Bhattacharya said.
India's Monetary Policy Committee, which consists of three members of the Reserve Bank of India and three external members, cut the key repo rate by 25 basis points to 6% earlier in April while changing the stance to "accommodative" from "neutral". This was the panel's second rate cut this year.
The RBI also lowered its GDP growth estimate for the current fiscal year to 6.5% from 6.7% amid U.S. tariff policy flip-flops, which have roiled financial markets.
The central bank, under Governor Sanjay Malhotra, who took charge in December, has flooded India's banking system with liquidity with an aim to boost growth and ensure smooth transmission of policy rates.
The RBI has infused liquidity worth 6.21 trillion rupees (about $73 billion) since the start of 2025.
It plans to buy bonds worth 1.25 trillion rupees in May, which is expected to lower the cost of overnight interbank funds, effectively acting as a rate cut, according to analysts.
This "proactive" infusion of cash is likely to assure markets that liquidity will be sufficient, Bhattacharya said.
Surplus liquidity of around 1% of overall deposits, perhaps even slightly higher, might be appropriate during the easing cycle, Bhattacharya said.
"With fresh government spending, system liquidity might even - transitorily - exceed this (1%) level and I am OK with that."
Unlike interest rates, liquidity is easier to calibrate and reverse, if inflationary pressures build up, he said.
Bhattacharya expects an "accelerated" transmission of rate cuts to consumers within the next two quarters as a majority of bank loans are linked to external benchmarks.
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