Non-food credit offtake increased 17.1 per cent to Rs 44.90 lakh crore during 12 months to January 13, amid the high interest rate regime. It was Rs 38.31 lakh crore during the year to January 14, 2011.
According to RBI data, until August, the offtake had been growing at over 18 per cent on an annualised basis before it started slowing down.
Experts said the slowdown in credit growth is on account of the high interest rate regime that has been in place for over a year, as the Reserve Bank of India hiked the lending rates by 350 basis points through 13 hikes since March 2010 to rein in inflation.
Meanwhile, deposits rose to over Rs 59.61 lakh crore during the 12-month period to January 13, 2012 from Rs 50.92 lakh crore during the corresponding period to January 14, 2011. This translates into a growth of 17 per cent.
In its third quarterly monetary policy review earlier this week, RBI had said credit growth was likely to slow down as a result of the rate hikes.
The apex bank revised downwards its projection for non-food credit growth to 16 per cent from the earlier estimate of around 17-18 per cent for this fiscal. Deposit growth has been pegged at 17 per cent.
During FY’11, bank credit offtake had increased by 21.5 per cent, while deposits had grown only 15.5 per cent.
Indian industry has complained that the high interest rate regime has resulted in slowing down of investment and industrial growth.
Economic growth slowed to a nine-quarter low of 6.9 per cent in the July-September period.
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