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Monetary Policy and Inflation Targeting in India
內容大綱
In May 2022, India's retail inflation rate rose above the upper limit of the target range set by the Reserve Bank of India in 2015, to reach 7.79 per cent. In recent years, India's retail inflation rate had been successfully kept within the target range of 2-6 per cent as the economy grew steadily. Everything changed in March 2020, however, when the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the economy of all countries around the world. In February 2022, two years after the outbreak of the pandemic, Russia invaded Ukraine, which further disrupted the global supply chains. As a result, all major economies had to closely manage their monetary policies with contractionary measures and use policy rates to contain inflation. Eventually, by March 2023, the inflation rate in India dropped to 5.66 per cent, within the target range. The Reserve Bank of India's governor had paused the rate hike in April after noticing that high interest rates were adversely affecting investments and growth prospects in the Indian economy. He knew that he had to continue using contractionary monetary policies but could not lower the policy repo rate, when inflation across major economies such as the United States and the United Kingdom were showing no signs of calming. He could choose to increase or keep the repo rate unchanged. Alternatively, he could choose a contractionary measure such as quantitative tightening.