With inflation falling to record low levels and industrial growth slipping to below 2 per cent, bankers and economists feel the pressure has increased on the Reserve Bank to cut the benchmark interest rate next month.
The six-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) headed by RBI Governor Urjit Patel will meet on August 1-2 for the third bi-monthly monetary policy review of 2017-18.
The MPC in its previous review in June had retained the repo rate at 6.25 per cent for the fourth straight time citing risk to inflation.
Private sector Kotak Bank is of the opinion that since the RBI has revised down its inflation trajectory sharply in the June policy, and given that inflation reading, the central bank has some room to be accommodative.
"We expect the MPC to cut repo rate by 25 bps in the August meeting,” the bank said in report.
BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research too expects the MPC to cut rates by 25 basis points (0.25 percentage points).
An SBI report said most inflation risks are now on the downside and expect the retail inflation to be sub-2 per cent for the next month, sub-3 per cent for August-September and sub-4 per cent for October-November and 4-4.5 per cent between December and March.
For 2017-18, the CPI inflation average could thus be below 3.5 per cent with a downward bias, the report added.
Retail inflation, which the RBI mainly factors in while deciding the interest rate, has declined to a historical low of 1.54 per cent in June. The wholesale price inflation for the month too has dropped to an eight-month-low.
Industry chamber CII is of the view that declining inflation, which has been undershooting the central bank’s inflation target by a large margin, should induce the RBI to resume its rate easing cycle.
CII said it “strongly recommends” a rate cut of 50 basis points in the forthcoming monetary policy to provide a fillip to demand.
Commenting on the retail inflation data, Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian had said the “paradigm shift” in the inflationary process has been missed by all who have made a “systematic inflation forecast error”, apparently referring to the RBI.
In the MPC, RBI Governor Urjit Patel had argued for avoiding a “premature policy action” and waiting for more inflation data.
“Incoming data is expected to provide greater clarity on the durability of recent food and non-food disinflation,” he had opined.
One of the MPC members, Ravindra Dholakia, however, had advocated a 50 basis points cut in the repo rate, saying several noteworthy developments recently on the prices and output fronts warrant a decisive policy action.