Singapore: The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee will go for a modest rate cut at the October meeting following the corporate tax rate cut announced by the government, Singapore's DBS Bank has said.
"With this fiscal boost focused on investment revival and not consumption (hence not inflationary), we reckon that the RBI MPC might proceed with a modest cut at the October MPC," the bank's economist Radhika Rao wrote in a commentary on the Indian economy on Monday.
"(RBI) Governor Shaktikanta Das also reinforced his dovish bias due to weak inflation and the negative output gap," Rao noted in the report on the Indian government's corporate tax rate cuts.
The central bank is likely to watch these developments closely as risk-free rates rise, Rao said, adding that the equity markets surged on Friday, while risk-free yields ticked up.
On September 20, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced to cut the basic corporate tax rate for domestic companies to 22 per cent from 30 per cent. The effective tax rate for domestic companies was reduced to 25.17 per cent from 34.94 per cent inclusive of surcharge and cess.
Also, new manufacturing companies starting production on or before March 31, 2023, and incorporated on or after October 1, 2019, will have an option to pay tax at a lower rate of 15 per cent if they do not avail any exemption/incentive.