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India raises interest rates

Geoff Riley

22nd April 2010

Sean O’Grady writes here about the decision by the Reserve Bank of India to raise interest rates once more to combat retail price inflation that hovers just below the ten per cent mark. A volcanic hat tip to John Richards from Tonbridge for spotting this one.

John points out that the article covers some really interesting macroeconomic aspects: namely the use of policy interest rates to control a booming economy, changes in reserve asset ratios (remember them?) as a tool of monetary control (limiting new bank lending), And also the high importance of food in the inflation basket for Indian consumers and the uneven impact of growth on the poorest parts of Indian society.

“The World Bank has said that faster economic growth has seen rising disparities between urban and rural areas in India, prosperous and lagging states, and skilled and low-skilled workers. India’s richest states have incomes that are five times higher than those of the poorest states – a gap that is higher than in most other democratic countries, and may damage social cohesion.”

Geoff Riley

Geoff Riley FRSA has been teaching Economics for over thirty years. He has over twenty years experience as Head of Economics at leading schools. He writes extensively and is a contributor and presenter on CPD conferences in the UK and overseas.

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