Wednesday, November 26, 2008

An Insight into the Monetary policy of India.


The Monetary Policy of India mainly aims at promoting economic growth by maintaining price stability.


The R.B.I meets regularly to decide what, if anything, to do with interest rates or Cash Reserve Ratios. Cash Reserve Ratio is defined as the percentage of cash which the commercial banks have to maintain with the Reserve Bank or Central bank of the country .


Stock traders almost always rejoice when the RBI cuts interest rates, but does a rate cut equal good news for everyone?


The interest rates, CRR are very important as many other rates, domestic and international, are linked directly to it or move closely with it, along with them the investment prospects and the quantum of loan disbursement also depends to a great extent .


Why Does It Change?


The interest rates, CRR, SLR ( Statutory Liquidity Ratio- The percentage of liquid assets which the bank has to maintain with itself) , PLR(Prime lending rate- Rates at which banks lend loans to the consumers) are monetary policy tools used to achieve the R.B.I's goals of price stability (low inflation or to overcome recessionary pressures) and sustaining economic growth. Changing the rates influences the money supply, beginning with banks and eventually affect consumers.


The R.B.I lowers interest rates in order to stimulate economic growth. Lower financing costs can encourage borrowing and investing. However, when rates are too low they can spur excessive growth and perhaps inflation. Inflation results in decrease of purchasing power and could undermine the sustainability of the desired economic expansion. On the other hand, when there is too much growth the R.B.I raises interest rates. Rate increases are used to slow inflation and return growth to more sustainable levels. Rates cannot get too high, because more expensive financing could lead the economy into a period of sluggishness. A rate cut could help consumers save money by reducing interest payments on certain types of financing that are linked to prime or other rates which tend to move in tandem with the RBI's rates.


A rate cut can prove beneficial for home financing, but the impact depends on what type of mortgage the borrower has, fixed or floating, and which rate the mortgage is linked to.For fixed-rate mortgages, a rate cut will have no impact on the amount of the monthly payment. Low rates can be good for potential homebuyers, but fixed-rate mortgages do not move directly with the RBI's rate changes. A rate cut changes the short-term lending rate, but fixed-rate mortgages are based on long-term rates, which do not fluctuate as much as short-term rates. When the RBI resorts to a rate cut, floating-rate payments will decrease. The amount by which a mortgage payment changes will depend on the rate the mortgage uses when it resets.


This is how the monetary policy affects the working capital requirements of companies, investment prospects of induviduals throught out the country, disposable incomes of people, Mobilisation of savings and eventually result in the growth of the nation.

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