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Known for his frank views, Rajan also said it was important to remember that the ”war against inflation” is never over.
”Inflation is up in India. At some point, the RBI will have to raise rates, like the rest of the world is doing,” he said in a LinkedIn post.
Costlier food items pushed the retail inflation to a 17-month high of 6.95 percent in March, above the upper tolerance level of the RBI, while the wholesale price-based inflation rose to a four-month peak of 14.55 percent, mainly due to the hardening of crude oil and commodity prices.
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Rajan is currently a professor at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
Earlier this month, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) kept borrowing costs unchanged at a record low for the 11th time in a row in a bid to continue supporting economic growth despite inflation edging higher.
While the RBI has raised the retail inflation projection for the current financial year to 5.7 percent from the earlier forecast of 4.5 percent, the benchmark interest rate was retained at 4 percent.
Addressing criticism that higher rates held back the economy during his term, Rajan said he became RBI governor with a three-year term in September 2013 when India had a full-blown currency crisis with the rupee in a free fall.
”Inflation was at 9.5 percent then, the RBI raised the repo rate from 7.25 percent in September 2013 to 8 percent to quell inflation.
”As inflation came down, we cut the repo rate by 150 basis points to 6.5 percent,” he recalled.
The eminent economist said: ”We also signed on to an inflation-targeting framework with the government.” While noting that these actions not only helped stabilize the economy and the rupee, he said between August 2013 and August 2016, ”inflation came down from 9.5 percent to 5.3 percent.”
Rajan said today, foreign reserves have climbed to over USD 600 billion, allowing the RBI to calm financial markets even as oil prices have climbed.
”Recall that the crisis in 1990-91, when we had to approach the IMF, was precipitated by higher oil prices. The RBI’s sound economic management has helped ensure this has not happened this time,” he noted.
While admitting that no one is happy when interest rates have to be raised, Rajan said he still gets brickbats from politically-motivated critics who allege the RBI held back the economy during his term.
Noting that some of his predecessors were similarly criticized, he asserted: ”It is essential that the RBI does what it needs to, and the broader polity gives it the latitude to do so.”