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Flexible Inflation Targeting

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January 22, 2021

What is the issue?

  • The 4% and +/- 2% target cycle for inflation under the Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) approach comes to an end this fiscal (March 31, 2021).
  • With the government tasked to notify the revised numbers, here is a look at how the target so far has worked.

What is FIT?

  • The Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) approach has served the RBI’s monetary policy for the last four years.
  • Inflation was the primary, clear target of this approach.
  • The FIT worked with a band that specified a target for inflation at an average of 4%.
  • It was however open to swinging up or down by two percentage points.

How does it work?

  • The adoption of FIT through a legislative mandate on September 29, 2016 was a landmark decision.
  • It worked as a milestone in the monetary and fiscal interface.
  • India since then followed a contractual approach of inflation targeting.
  • Under this, the government decides and notifies the target.
  • It gives the RBI the operational independence to operate its policy instruments to deliver on the agreed target.

How has FIT performed?

  • Since the inception of FIT in 2016, GDP growth starting 2016-17 and ending 2019-20 stood at 8.26, 7.04, 6.12 and 4.18 (all in Y-o-Y and in percentage terms).
  • In the same period, the average inflation rate was at 4.5, 3.6, 3.4 and 4.8 (in percentage terms).
  • So in the first four years, the mandate has been met.
  • To that extent, it can be said that the monetary policy has been effective.

What is the recent inflation scenario?

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has put severe pressure on the monetary policy objective.
  • There was an unprecedented contraction in the growth rate of 23.9% in Q1 and 7.5% in Q2 of 2020-21, and an estimated contraction of 7.7% for fiscal 2020-21.
  • Worryingly, the headline inflation rate remained above the upper band of 6% for eight consecutive months during the period April–Nov 2020.
  • However, the December 2020 CPI inflation is at 4.59% on Y-o-Y basis.
  • This was mainly on account of deceleration in food inflation by 3.87%.
  • The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) in its December 2020 resolution had stated that the inflation rate will come down to 5.8% in Q4 of 2020-21, with risks broadly balanced.
  • Thus, the RBI is hopeful of returning to the target as soon as the supply side bottlenecks ease.

Why should FIT continue?

  • FIT has worked reasonably well with the average of 4% and a band of +/- 2%.
  • A reasonable band of 2% on the lower side and 6% on the upper side gives the RBI manoeuvrability for inflation management.
    • This is especially given the fact that India has many uncontrollable variables, most notably monsoons.
    • Besides food inflation, fuel inflation is also dependent upon the volatility of crude oil prices.
  • Also, 4% headline inflation with an upper ceiling of 6% keeps the core inflation (headline inflation minus food and fuel inflation) at an appropriate level.
    • This is because there is a co-movement of core inflation with the headline inflation and vice versa.
  • Any increase in the band above 6% will put pressure on the RBI in anchoring inflation expectations.
  • On the lower side of the band, any inflation rate lower than 2% has the potential risk of the economy entering in a deflationary situation.
  • Prior to the adoption of FIT, the RBI did not have the exposure in terms of responding to the CPI inflation.
  • Earlier, WPI was taken as inflation measurement. However, CPI gives a weightage of around 46% to food inflation on which the RBI has no control.
  • Over the four-year period since FIT adoption, the RBI’s CPI inflation forecasting has been reasonably successful.
  • RBI has also been effective in anchoring inflation expectation in a three-month and one-year ahead time frame.

What lies ahead?

  • FIT should not be considered as a statistical measure to balance the risk of inflation alone.
  • In many ways, it is a barometer of measuring the quality of macroeconomic management particularly in a country where poverty predominates.
  • What is required is not the change in FIT but an effective fiscal and monetary interface with responsible and functional autonomy to the RBI.

 

Source: BusinessLine

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