US tariffs key drag on growth, flags benign inflation outlook: MPC
The Reserve Bank of India held its key repo rate steady at 5.50 per cent earlier this month, after cutting rates by 100 basis points so far in 2025.
The six-member Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to retain a "neutral" stance, citing the need for flexibility amid domestic and global uncertainties.
"Growth projected at 6.5 per cent is resilient," RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra wrote in the minutes, but added the projection was "certainly lower than what we can achieve." He warned that uncertainty in external demand, driven by tariffs and geopolitical tensions, remained a major drag on growth.
India faces as much as 50 per cent tariff on exports to the United States starting August 27 after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed an additional 25 per cent tariff earlier in the month citing New Delhi's continued imports of Russian oil.
Malhotra said the moderation in food inflation since the June meeting was larger than expected, but cautioned that the uncertainties around tariffs were still evolving. He added that the neutral stance would provide the necessary flexibility to respond to changing conditions.
India's retail inflation rate dropped to its lowest level in eight years in July, as falling food prices, especially vegetables and pulses, squeezed farmers' incomes.
Deputy Governor Poonam Gupta said the moderation in inflation was not broad-based and was primarily driven by food prices falling. "Core inflation is likely to remain above 4 per cent in the near to medium term, barring any major negative shock to input prices," she wrote.
MPC member Ram Singh said the average CPI inflation outlook for 2025â€'26 had become "very benign," though core inflation was expected to stay above the target range. He flagged sustained growth in construction, trade and services, but warned of high uncertainty on both inflation and growth fronts.
External member Nagesh Kumar said the case for stimulating private investments and urban demand remains strong while the benign inflation outlook also provides policy space. But considering trade policy uncertainties, it is better to wait and watch before looking at any policy decisions at the October meeting, he said.
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