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Macro Economics




                    Notes

                                      Task  Compare the contrast the monetary policies of India in the 1990s and 2000s.





                                     Caselet     India’s Inflated Monetary Policy Challenge

                                     While central banks around the world are busy worrying whether to be hawks or doves,
                                     the Reserve Bank of India is unlikely to find solace in either choice.
                                     The  RBI has  been grappling with uncomfortably  high inflation  for more  than a  year
                                     despite raising interest rates 11 times in 18 months. Growth indicators, meanwhile, have
                                     proved unreliable given the uncertainty of a global recovery and still fragile domestic
                                     business sentiment.
                                     The latest data underscore the RBI’s dilemma. The wholesale price index rose 9.8% in
                                     August, well above the RBI’s much-revised target  of 7%.  Industrial production  data,
                                     meanwhile, have been an unreliable indicator of growth. Industrial output grew 8.8% in
                                     June, but slowed to 3.3% in July. This, in part, is due to a higher base from the previous
                                     year but also reflects the wavering confidence of companies producing or buying capital
                                     goods.

                                     The RBI is partly to be blamed for landing itself in this unenviable position. Though it has
                                     been one of the most aggressive central banks globally in the last year, it chose to increase
                                     rates in small doses, bending to New Delhi’s—and the industrial lobby’s—desire to keep
                                     growth robust. The bank has no control  over the  price rises caused by infrastructure
                                     bottlenecks and supply constraints. But its predictable quarter-point rate increases at every
                                     policy review failed to stop speculators from betting on further rises in inflation.
                                     India’s economic growth  is vulnerable  to a  deteriorating global outlook. High interest
                                     rates at home are already taking a toll. A 10.1% fall in domestic car sales after a blistering
                                     run of growth is  one indication. On top of everything, the unreliability of India’s data
                                     leaves its central bank with the unenviable task of picking the right indicators to guide its
                                     policy.

                                     With global commodity prices still high  and a  lack of fiscal restraint from New Delhi,
                                     another quarter-point increase, expected Friday, may not be enough to curb inflation. The
                                     RBI’s predicament, behind  the curve, serves as  a warning  for other emerging-market
                                     central banks.

                                   Source:  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904060604576572612381947514.html

                                   13.3.2 Monetary Policy in an Open Economy

                                   An open  economy is free to trade with  the other economies of different countries. This is in
                                   sharp contrast with the  closed economy  where people  are not allowed to trade with  other
                                   countries. An open economy is a field, which deals in Macro Economic phenomena like exchange
                                   rates, balance of trade, tariffs, subsidies, and import quotas. An open economy is advantageous
                                   because people can trade in goods and services; indulge in business with the international arena
                                   at large. This increases the scope of trade and business leading to profitable earnings.

                                   The opening up of the economy has implications for the conduct of monetary policy as well as
                                   the monetary transmission mechanism. In particular, it has rendered economies vulnerable to




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