RBI Governor Warns of Entrenched Inflation as Middle East Conflict Threatens Indian Economy
Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra warns that prolonged Middle East tensions could trigger second-round inflationary effects, embedding high prices into wages and services. While India remains resilient with projected growth of 6.8%-7.1%, the RBI maintains a cautious stance on interest rates as supply chain disruptions and energy costs threaten domestic economic stability.
India's economic exposure to the Middle East remains significant, as the region accounts for roughly one-sixth of the country's exports and approximately one-fifth of its imports. Furthermore, the Middle East supplies around half of India's crude oil, alongside a substantial share of fertilizer imports and inward remittances, rendering any prolonged disruption particularly sensitive for domestic prices. While India has been shielded from sharp fuel price increases seen in other economies due to state-run refiners absorbing a portion of cost pressures to keep retail prices stable, that buffer may not hold indefinitely. With regional elections underway and financial strain building on refiners, any eventual pass-through of higher costs to consumers could exacerbate inflationary pressures already weighing on the economy.
despite these risks, SBI Research suggests India remains resilient amid the oil shock and may grow 6.8%-7.1% despite global headwinds. Governor Malhotra indicated that the central bank's response would focus on managing expectations rather than aggressively tightening demand, signaling a preference to act through its influence on inflation expectations rather than through blunt demand compression to avoid sharp rate hikes that could slow growth. For now, the central bank appears to be in no rush to act, adopting a cautious stance and closely tracking incoming data. Although the RBI kept interest rates unchanged in April to assess rising oil prices and external uncertainties, and rates are likely to remain steady in the near to medium term, Malhotra stopped short of offering firm guidance, underlining that global uncertainty could still force a shift in either direction.

Comment List