[ad_1]
The MPC, which met for three days ended Thursday, pegged the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation rate at 4.6 per cent for the first quarter of the current financial year against 5.1 per cent, forecast in the April policy.
The panel also cut its projection for CPI inflation rate to 5.2 per cent for the second quarter against 5.4 per cent, pegged earlier.
The projections for Q3 and Q4 were retained at 5.4 and 5.2 per cent, respectively.
Though it said the forecast of normal monsoon by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) augurs well for kharif crops, it cautioned that the spatial and temporal distribution of the monsoon would need to be closely monitored to assess the prospects for agricultural production.
Elsewhere, the weather office predicted a normal monsoon.
It cited the early results from the Reserve Bank’s surveys to say that manufacturing, services and infrastructure firms polled expect input costs and output prices to harden. However, it said a clearer picture will emerge when the final survey results are available.
RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das had correctly anticipated that the economic growth would be higher than Advance Estimates projections at 7 per cent for 2022-23. It turned out to be 7.2 per cent for the year. It would now be interesting to see whether projections of the MPC, chaired by the RBI governor, for 2023-24 would also hold true for FY’24.
The panel said higher rabi crop production in 2022-23, the expected normal monsoon, and the sustained buoyancy in services should support private consumption and overall economic activity in the current year.
However, it cautioned that weak external demand, geo-economic fragmentation, and protracted geopolitical tensions pose risks to the outlook.
[ad_2]
Source link