Mumbai:The RBI's surprise rate hike may have been prompted by its inability to convince the government to cut excise duty on petrol and diesel and take other supply-side measures to tame runaway inflation, sources aware of the central bank's thinking said on Thursday. There has been a record Rs 10 a litre increase in petrol and diesel prices in a matter of 16 days beginning March 22, which has further fuelled the already high commodity prices.
The RBI, which is mandated to ensure inflation is under 6 per cent, acted with a 0.40 per cent increase in repo rate to check prices before they went completely out of hand. "You should look at this measure as when it gets tough, RBI stands alone now," a source said. The RBI "pleaded, begged, exhorted" the government for measures like a further cut in excise duty on fuels which have a direct impact on inflation, but could not manage a response.
It also asked state governments -- which too impose levies, thus further raising fuel prices -- to follow suit but again did not manage to move the needle, the source said. The RBI has said "enough" and now that the time to act has arisen, it will act alone in its fight against inflation, the source said. The price hikes on fuel began after elections ended in Uttar Pradesh and other states -- ending a lull of nearly three months when there was no review despite increasing global crude prices.