RBI keeps rate on hold at Rajan's last review
Mumbai: Reserve Bank of India governor Raghuram Rajan kept interest rates on hold on Tuesday in a bid to wrestle down inflation, in his final policy review.
In a widely expected move, the RBI governor said he would hold the benchmark repo rate, the level at which it lends to commercial banks, at 6.50 per cent.
"In view of configuration of risks, it is appropriate for the reserve bank to keep the policy repo rate unchanged," Rajan said in a statement.
Rajan has slashed interest rates over the past 18 months, but the government wanted deeper cuts, saying these would boost growth further.
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India's economy expanded by 7.9 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2015-16, the fastest of any major economy.
The government is yet to announce a successor to Rajan, two months after he announced he was stepping down in September when his term finishes and returning to academia in the United States.
Rajan, who has made controlling inflation a priority, has been widely credited with bringing stability to India's economy since taking over the RBI reins in September 2013.
But his policy making decisions have been criticised by a prominent member of BJP and he has also clashed with the government.
Rajan, who famously predicted the 2008 global financial crisis, has brought down double-digit inflation during his tenure. He has set a goal of limiting inflation to 5 per cent by March 2017. But inflation inched upwards to 5.77 per cent in June.
The monsoon currently sweeping India has brought much-needed relief to millions of farmers who rely heavily on the annual rains for their crops. But food prices are still high in some rural areas that have been suffering from two years of crippling drought.