SME Times News Bureau | 01 Aug, 2012
Reserve Bank of
India (RBI) Governor Duvvuri Subbarao Tuesday said persistent high inflation
did not allow the central bank to cut interest rates immediately but there was
scope for their being lowered in the 2012 calendar year.
"Well I see scope. But I can't say when," Subbarao told reporters
when asked whether there was any scope of cutting rates in the current calender
year.
In the first quarter review of the monetary policy, the RBI kept key policy
rates unchanged for the second time since June saying lowering of rates would
aggravate inflationary pressure.
Repo rate, the rate at which the RBI lends to commercial banks, remains
unchanged at 8 percent, while the reverse repo rate, the rate at which RBI
borrows money from commercial banks, stays steady at 7 percent.
Subbarao said inflation stickiness did not allow the central bank to cut the
rates.
Core inflation was recorded at 7.25 percent in June as per the latest available
data. The real worry is on food inflation, which remains in double-digit. Food
inflation accelerated to 10.81 percent in June as compared to 10.74 percent in
the previous month.
On economic growth, Subbarao said growth has slowed due to several factors and
monetary policy alone should not be blamed for it.
"There are several factors responsible for growth slowdown, the monetary
policy stance is only one of them," Subbarao said at a press conference
after the central bank announced the monetary policy review.
The RBI Governor claimed that there was no liquidity problem in the system.
"Real interest rates continue to be lower than what it was in the
pre-crisis period," he said.