Lil Mathew
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Wrong.
Increasing interest rates means the savings of people are higher which increases consumption long term as they gain more money from the savings. Increasing interest rates reduce inflation by decreasing money supply. Decreasing inflation makes goods affordable to consumers. They are doing that to increase the purchasing power of consumers. They realise consumption is the only engine of growth India has and due to the collapsed Rupee the inflation is way too high for ordinary consumers to buy goods as they now have to spend more of their income on the same goods.
Try harder, maybe then your economy wouldn't collapse as it does every few years
With the Indian 'logic' no wonder the Indian economy is such a laughing stock with such high inflation and collapsing Rupee. Indians lack basic understanding how things work in reality and brainwashed by jingoistic propaganda.
First understand The Reserve Bank of India hiked short term rates... Here RBI took the first strong measure to support the Indian rupee and its primary objective is not related to domestic inflation... Inflation mainly due to the oil price not RBI policies...
Here's what the central bank has done.
1) The RBI has increased banks' cost of borrowing short term money through the Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) rate and Bank Rate each by 200 basis points ( 2 per cent) to 10.25 per cent. The measure will make it unattractive for banks to borrow rupee (at cheap rates) and buy dollars (in the forward markets). This will reduce the pressure on the rupee.
2) The RBI has capped the amount banks can borrow from overnight markets to Rs. 75,000 crore. This is aimed to suck liquidity
from the system. This will prevent banks from taking speculative position in forward markets (will support the rupee).
3) The RBI will conduct Open Market Sales of bonds of Rs. 12,000
crore on Thursday to further suck out liquidity from the system. Bond prices will fall and yields will rise. Higher yields will attract foreign investors in the debt market. FIIs have sold billions of dollars in the debt market ever since Fed Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signalled a tapering of the quantitative easing in the U.S. resulting in a 10 per cent drop in the value of Indian rupee. Net portfolio investments in India slumped to just $50 million in the three months to June from $11.3 billion in the quarter ending in April.