RBI Bulletin - March 2023 - ആർബിഐ - Reserve Bank of India
RBI Bulletin - March 2023
Today, the Reserve Bank released the March 2023 issue of its monthly Bulletin. The Bulletin includes five speeches, five articles and current statistics. The five articles are: I. State of the Economy; II. Consumer Price Index: Aggregation Method Matters ; III. Financial Stocks and Flow of Funds of the Indian Economy 2020-21 ; IV. Application of Growth-at-Risk (GaR) Framework for Indian GDP; and V. Subnational Borrowings in India – Volatilities and Determinants of State Government Securities (SGS) Spread. I. State of the Economy Even as global growth is set to slow down or even enter a recession in 2023 as global financial markets wager, India has emerged from the pandemic years stronger than initially thought, with a steady gathering of momentum since the second quarter of the current financial year. On the supply side, agriculture is into a seasonal uptick, industry is emerging out of contraction and services have maintained momentum. Consumer price inflation remains high and core inflation continues to defy the distinct softening of input costs. II. Consumer Price Index: Aggregation Method Matters By Praggya Das and Asish Thomas George The present method of consumer price index (CPI) compilation involves an aggregation of indices across States/UTs and sectors to arrive at the all-India overall index. The national sub-group and group level indices are also arrived at by following a similar horizontal method of aggregation. As a result, any attempt to derive the all-India indices (sub-group/group/overall) through item-level aggregation may diverge from the published indices, especially when there are instances of missing prices or provision of subsidised items for which price quotes may be zero, as was the case in January-February 2023. The article, in this context, presents a discussion on the aggregation methodology followed in the compilation of CPI, the extent of divergence seen between published and user derived CPI inflation and sets out feasible ways to minimise such divergences in inflation measurement. Highlights:
III. Financial Stocks and Flow of Funds of the Indian Economy 2020-21 By Anupam Prakash, Kaustav K Sarkar, Ishu Thakur and Sapna Goel The article provides insights on instrument-wise financial stocks and flow of funds (FSF) for the institutional sectors, i.e., financial corporations; non-financial corporations; general government; households including non-profit institutions serving households; and rest of the world, on a ‘from-whom-to-whom’ (FWTW) basis for the year 2020-21. Highlights:
IV. Application of Growth-at-Risk (GaR) Framework for Indian GDP By Saurabh Ghosh, Vidya Kamate and Ria Sonpatki This article analyses the role of domestic and international macro-financial conditions in influencing the future distribution of GDP growth for India using a Growth-at-Risk (GaR) framework. It helps to shed light on low probability extreme events and in quantifying the likelihood of tail risk scenarios. It is important to note that GaR relates to the lower quantiles of GDP growth rather than the baseline mean growth forecast. Highlights:
V. Subnational Borrowings in India –Volatilities and Determinants of State Government Securities (SGS) Spread By Suraj.S, Amit Pawar and Subrat Kumar Seet The article outlines the impact of the pandemic and policy measures undertaken by the Reserve Bank on the primary and secondary markets for State Government Securities (SGS). It studies the linkages between G-Sec and SGS yields and factors driving the pricing of SGS in primary markets. Highlights:
The views expressed in the Bulletin articles are of the authors and do not represent the views of the Reserve Bank of India. (Yogesh Dayal) Press Release: 2022-2023/1895 |