As the RBIs monetary policy has come and gone there is a major argument on between economists about the amount of monetary tightening that RBI should do and how inflation can be controlled. Most of the textbook economists are proposing that RBI should be much more aggressive. However the key is to evaluate whether a more aggressive policy at a time when RBI has been one of the most aggressive Central Banker in the world is the way to control inflation at all.
As I have argued several times in the past, in an integrated world where commodities and money flows are linked to each other and most commodity price movements are global in nature it is very difficult for a country like
In
Power is another segment where we are likely to see huge additions of capacities by the private sector over the next 3-4 years. This will keep electricity prices in
On the agricultural side also we have seen a revolution in Cotton production due to better productivity after the introduction of BT Cotton. However in lot of other agri products where production can be boosted significantly by better seed usage we have not seen any moves for the last several years. In a large number of agri products
One example of pathetic yields in agriculture is on the oilseeds front where at 950 kg per acre Indian yields are half of the global average and one third of the leading producers. As a result
Even when production is strong poor supply chains and outdated Agriculture Produce Marketing norms lead to a huge amount of losses which is estimated to be more than 30-40% of the perishable products.
My point to all the monetarists is that the basis of their analysis is flawed when they give a huge weight age to Indian monetary policy when the global policy is extremely loose. Monetary policy works best when the largest economies of the world move in that direction. Prices of crude oil, steel, copper or any other industrial commodity is hardly dependant on whether Indian consumption is rising by 5% or 10% as we are still 2-3% in the consumption of most such commodities. Except for food grains, sugar etc. Indian consumption does not really impact global commodity prices.
RBIs monetary policy is most effective for controlling asset bubbles and in the current monetary policy statement they have excluded the paragraph on the asset prices as they believe that there is no bubble formation in that segment.
This issue can be discussed ad nauseum as there are arguments on both sides; however the only way to go in my view is to go for large scale investments across various segments in order to boost supplies and improve productivity as that is the only way to control inflation. For how long
uple of percentages of lost growth in a year adds up to a bigger price on compounding over the longer time frame.
Markets
It seems I changed by view on a correction to the 5400 range too soon around a month back as I became positive on the world markets and did not really think that Indian can under perform so severely. Whereas Indian market correlation with the Hong Kong markets has been more than 80% historically over the last month we have seen a totally inverse correlation with
The key for investors today is to evaluate how things will be a year from now and not how things look today. The problem normally is that most investors extrapolate today into the future, however the best returns are made in adversity and as such I believe the next few days and weeks are the best ones for investing into