FLEXIBLE INFLATION TARGETING
FLEXIBLE INFLATION TARGETING
Introduction
Inflation management is a cornerstone of macroeconomic stability. Since 2016, India has adopted the Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework, mandating the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to maintain inflation at 4% ± 2%. As the current mandate ends in March 2026, the framework is under review. This essay evaluates key questions central to that review: (1) What to target—headline or core inflation? (2) What should be an acceptable level of inflation? (3) Is the existing inflation tolerance band adequate?
Importance of Controlling Inflation
Inflation as a regressive tax: High inflation disproportionately affects poorer households whose incomes are not indexed to price increases.
Impact on savings and investment: Persistent inflation discourages savings, distorts investment decisions, and undermines financial stability.
Historical perspective:
The Chakravarty Committee (1985) considered 4% as a reasonable inflation rate to allow necessary relative price adjustments.
Post-1994, with the dismantling of automatic monetisation, RBI gained greater autonomy, enabling better inflation management.
What Should Inflation Targeting Focus On? Headline vs Core
Why Headline Inflation Matters
True measure of cost of living: Headline inflation captures changes in all goods and services, directly affecting household welfare.
Protection of vulnerable groups: Food and fuel have high weight in poor households’ consumption baskets.
Misconceptions Around Core Inflation
Food inflation is not always supply-driven: Episodes show food prices also respond to expansionary monetary conditions.
Relative prices vs general price level:
Without excess liquidity, spikes in individual commodity prices do not raise the general price level.
However, in India, second-round effects—wage pressures and higher input costs—often transmit food price shocks into broader inflation.
Conclusion
Given India’s structure, headline inflation remains the most appropriate target to ensure welfare and macroeconomic stability.
Acceptable Level of Inflation: Is 4% Justified?
Phillips Curve Debate
The traditional Phillips Curve—trade-off between inflation and growth—has not held consistently.
Economists like Friedman argued that such a trade-off exists only in the short run.
Threshold Inflation Concept
Empirical studies show that beyond a certain level of inflation, growth suffers.
Recent analysis indicates that for India, the threshold lies near 4%, with the inflection point estimated at 3.98%.
Forward-Looking Considerations
Future macroeconomic conditions, fiscal pressures, and external vulnerabilities must inform the target.
Preliminary simulations suggest inflation below 4% may be optimal, but the currently mandated 4% remains reasonable.
Inflation Band: Is ±2% Adequate?
Merits of the Current Band
The 2%–6% range has provided adequate policy flexibility during global shocks.
It prevented inflation from spiralling while allowing growth support during crises.
Remaining Concerns
Persistent operation near the upper band undermines the credibility of the FIT system.
Empirical observations indicate that growth declines sharply beyond 6% inflation.
Fiscal-Monetary Coordination
India’s high inflation experience during the 1970s–80s was driven predominantly by monetised deficits.
The sequence of reforms—ending ad hoc treasury bills, enacting the FRBM Act, and adopting FIT—strengthened macroeconomic stability.
Any dilution of FRBM or FIT provisions risks destabilising the other.
Conclusion
Flexible Inflation Targeting has contributed significantly to anchoring inflation expectations in India. While the 4% target and ±2% band appear broadly appropriate, stronger commitment to headline inflation metrics and fiscal discipline is essential. A well-calibrated FIT framework, paired with credible fiscal consolidation, will ensure India’s sustained growth and macroeconomic resilience in the coming decade.
Mains Questions
Discuss the rationale behind adopting a 4% inflation target under India’s Flexible Inflation Targeting framework. Is this level still appropriate? Explain.
Should monetary policy target headline inflation or core inflation? Evaluate with reference to India’s economic structure.
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