The repo rate, or the rate at which banks borrow from the Reserve Bank of India, may end the year at eight per cent, a level where it stood at the beginning of 2013.
Early this year, most economists had expected the repo rate would be cut 100 basis points through the year.
But due to concerns on the inflation and the rupee fronts, the cuts were limited to 75 basis points till May 3, followed by a reversal beginning with the central bank’s first monetary policy review under the governorship of Raghuram Rajan, on September 20.
Currently, the rate stands at 7.75 per cent. The Street expects a further rise of 25 basis points in the mid-quarter review of monetary policy on Wednesday.
This is because Consumer Price Index-based inflation rose to 11.24 per cent in November, compared with 10.17 per cent the previous month; Wholesale Price Index (WPI)-based inflation rose to 7.52 per cent from seven per cent.
“RBI said inflation was the key trigger for it to start raising rates since
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