The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has revealed its fourth bi-monthly monetary policy on October 6. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), led by RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, held a three-day meeting starting from October 4. The central bank has decided to maintain the repo rate at 6.50% and has adopted a stance of ‘withdrawal of accommodation.’
RBI kept GDP growth forecast for FY24 unchanged at 6.5%.
MPC voted to remain focused on withdrawal of accommodation by 5 votes to 1.
Section 45ZB of the amended RBI Act, 1934, mandates the formation of an empowered six-member Monetary Policy Committee, officially constituted by the Central Government through notification in the Official Gazette. The inaugural MPC came into being on September 29, 2016.
The Central Government, through an official Gazette notification dated October 5, 2020, appointed the following individuals as members of the MPC:
(Note: Members 4 to 6 hold office for a period of four years or until further orders, whichever is earlier.)
Setting the Policy Repo Rate
The MPC is tasked with determining the policy repo rate, a crucial tool for achieving the inflation target set by the RBI.
Meeting Frequency and Quorum
The MPC convenes a minimum of four times annually, with a quorum of four members required for the meeting to proceed.
Voting and Decision-Making
Each member of the MPC holds one vote, and in cases of tied votes, the Governor possesses a casting vote. Furthermore, each member is required to provide a statement explaining their vote in favor of or against a proposed resolution.
The RBI employs various direct and indirect instruments to implement its monetary policies, ensuring economic stability and liquidity management.
The repo rate is the interest rate at which the RBI provides liquidity under the Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) to participants, with government and approved securities as collateral.
The SDF rate, positioned 25 basis points below the policy repo rate, is the rate at which the RBI accepts uncollateralized overnight deposits from LAF participants.
The MSF rate, set 25 basis points above the policy repo rate, allows banks to borrow from the RBI on an overnight basis, using their Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) portfolio as collateral.
The LAF encompasses the RBI’s operations to inject or absorb liquidity from the banking system, utilizing various instruments such as repo/reverse repos, SDF, and MSF, along with other tools like open market operations (OMOs), forex swaps, and market stabilization schemes (MSS).
The LAF corridor, with the MSF rate as the upper limit and the SDF rate as the lower limit, employs the policy repo rate as the central rate. A 14-day term repo/reverse repo auction operation serves as the primary tool for managing frictional liquidity requirements.
To address unanticipated liquidity changes, the RBI conducts fine-tuning operations, including overnight and longer-term repo/reverse repo auctions.
The reverse repo rate is the interest rate at which the RBI absorbs liquidity from banks using eligible government securities as collateral.
The bank rate facilitates the purchase or rediscounting of bills of exchange and commercial papers by the RBI. It also serves as a penal rate for banks with shortfalls in meeting reserve requirements.
CRR and SLR are reserve ratios banks are required to maintain with the RBI, contributing to liquidity control.
OMOs involve the outright purchase/sale of government securities by the RBI to inject or absorb durable liquidity in the banking system.
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