RBI Bulletin - November 2021 - ஆர்பிஐ - Reserve Bank of India
RBI Bulletin - November 2021
The Reserve Bank of India today released the November 2021 issue of its monthly Bulletin. The Bulletin includes five speeches, four articles and current statistics. The four articles are: I. State of the Economy; II. Is the Phillips Curve in India Dead, Inert and Stirring to Life or Alive and Well?; III. Uncertainty and Disagreement among Professional Macroeconomic Forecasters; and IV. Changing Tides in the Indian Money Market. I. State of the Economy The global economic outlook remains shrouded in uncertainty with headwinds from multiple fronts. In India, the recovery gained strength though the speed and pace of improvement remains uneven across different sectors of the economy. Indicators of aggregate demand posit a brighter near-term outlook than before. On the supply side, the Rabi season has set in early on a positive note on the back of a record Kharif harvest and manufacturing is showing improvement in overall operating conditions, while services are in strong expansion mode. Overall monetary and credit conditions stay conducive for a durable economic recovery to take root. II. Is the Phillips Curve in India Dead, Inert and Stirring to Life or Alive and Well? The post-Global Financial Crisis period has seen a plethora of literature on the “health” of the most cited macroeconomic relationship –the Phillips Curve. Adding more essence to this heated global debate, this article examines the existence of the Phillips Curve in India by examining its time-variation and convexity. The findings from this paper confirm the existence of a convex Philips Curve relationship in India, though alive but stirring to life and convalescing from a period of flattening, which lasted for more than six years. III. Uncertainty and Disagreement among Professional Macroeconomic Forecasters This article analyses the responses received in the Reserve Bank’s bimonthly survey of professional forecasters (SPF) on major macroeconomic variables. The forecasts of output growth and inflation, particularly for 2020-21, were characterised by high uncertainty in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. The article dives into the fluctuations in short-term forecasts during the pandemic. Highlights
IV. Changing Tides in the Indian Money Market Money market provides short-term capital to a wide class of financial entities and plays a key role in the transmission of monetary policy. This article reviews the important segments of the Indian money market in terms of volume, rate, microstructure, and dispersion of rates for the period from January-2016 to March-2021. Highlights
The dispersion index that peaked in March-2020 showed a decreasing trend at the end of the sample period considered. The sector-specific, institution-specific and instrument-specific liquidity measures undertaken by the Reserve Bank in the recent times have resulted in the stabilisation of the money market with the market adapting to the new normal. Ajit Prasad Press Release: 2021-2022/1197 |