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Another wrong turn

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    Is the Reserve Bank of India reading its own projections? There seems to be every indication that its left hand doesn’t seem to understand what its right hand is doing. In the survey of the state of the Indian economy that the RBI

    released on the eve of the credit policy it came out with a gloomy forecast about India’s growth path: it expected growth to be restricted to around 6 per cent for this financial year, which is considerably lower than the number that the government has put out as its official estimate. That is gloom in the real economy. Then there’s the financial data that it has made public, which shows that credit growth continues slow. Indeed, the rate of credit growth, between 10 and 11 per cent, is much lower than it has been at comparable times of the season previously. There have been some optimistic numbers issued from various sources recently, certainly. But those are questionable when put in the right context; and, even if accepted uncritically, a single month of reasonable figures bang in the middle of a dozen months of gloom shouldn’t signal a recovery to even the most optimistic of central bankers.

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    Yet the hard-headed numbers of the RBI seem to be completely ignored by the men at the top when it comes to the words and actions that they actually made public in the credit policy on Tuesday. In a shockingly disappointing approach, the RBI signalled that it simply didn’t care about growth. Although the key policy rates were not directly tampered with, it hiked the “statutory liquidity ratio” or SLR by a percentage point; this is universally acknowledged as a clear signal of intent from the RBI to tighten monetary policy pretty soon.

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    RBI Monetary Policy By: Prof. Raghbendra Jha | 29-Oct-2009 Reply | Forward Indian policymakers are never tired of patting themselves on the back that the Indian economy got out of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) with reasonably high growth rates. Actually, when compared to China's the Indian growth performance is not good. India has a much lower exposure to international trade than China, has a lower saving rate than China, both countries had massive stimulus packages and neither Indian nor Chinese banks failed during the GFC. Then why is India's growth so much lower than China's? Part of the reason must lie in the contradictory mix of expansionary fiscal policy and contractionary monetary policy (the latter based on deeply flawed price indices with WPI inflation and CPI inflation going their separate ways). This is bad policy all around
    Amazing ReadersBy: Mash | 29-Oct-2009 Reply | Forward It is quite funny to find readers lacking basic understanding, being conlusive on quality and intent of the article. Growth does not lead to inflation. Inflation , if you talk about the the way is represented in India, is driven a lot on the energy price. Growth with currency appreciation will restrict inflation and will even lower the inflation. But the morons in the North block and the RBI are driven by agaenda of their masters in the ruling alliance. with inflation of 5% and projected growth of 6% , the real growth is ~1% which is terrible for India considering the demographics and the influx of cheap illegal labor from Bangladesh. India needs a growth of 10% plus to avoid a castrophy by 2020. Congress unfortunately for past 40 years is busy managing vote banks and addicted to 4-^% growth. This growth keeps the poverty and the vote bank intact- the reason of winning the election game. Middle class
    Real Estate funding bank editorialsBy: Amit | 28-Oct-2009 Reply | Forward The tightening of the real estate sector must have led to these kinds of irrational editorials..For a change we have one instituions which works honestly and independently..It seems the media wallahs want even that to bow before the Gandhi family...and help it maintain real estate prices above afforadable level.
    This is the worst editorial I have seenBy: Sameer | 28-Oct-2009 Reply | Forward I was a fan of IE in the late 80's but now when I read it the depth in thinking seens to have been lost.Does the editor understand that India has about 70% population who cannot afford a decent meal. Does this editor ever do grocery shopping ??Growth at what cost ??? inflation that will starve the poor and middle class and bring jazzy cars for rich ?????For once Mr. editor show some brains, inflation is an all time high and this so called growth is only benefitting a few of the elite industries and causing grave harm to others more basic like agriculture.
    RBI's monetary stanceBy: ashok | 28-Oct-2009 Reply | Forward A certain creative tension between the government and the RBI is healthy, becuase they are shooting for two often conflicting goals of growth and price stability. The projections of inflation going well beyond six per cent by March 2010 mean that the RBI's present concerns are not misplaced.Let us not forget that real, lasting damage to economic growth has been caused in the past when inflation becomes politically sensitive and the government gets the RBI to choke the economy into submission.
    WHAT DOES YOU WANTBy: Anand | 28-Oct-2009 Reply | Forward So, what is your point ?? Do you seek growth at the cost of inflation ??
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