Centre asks RBI to keep retail inflation target at 4% till 2031

Here is the complete UPSC study note:


Centre Asks RBI to Keep Retail Inflation Target at 4% till 2031


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2014 Urjit Patel Committee recommends formal inflation-targeting regime with CPI as the nominal anchor
2015 RBI–Government Monetary Policy Framework Agreement signed (February 20, 2015); pre-legislative arrangement before statutory backing
2016 Finance Act, 2016 amends the RBI Act, 1934 — inserts Sections 45ZA to 45ZL; MPC constituted; inflation target set at 4% (upper: 6%) from August 5, 2016 to March 31, 2021 [S2][S3]
Oct 2016 First MPC meeting held; repo rate decision taken by six-member committee for the first time [S4]
March 2021 Government first renewal: same 4% ± 2% target retained for April 2021 – March 2026 [S4]
March 2026 Government second renewal: same target retained for April 2026 – March 2031 [S1][S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Legal Basis - Enabling provision: Section 45ZA, RBI Act, 1934 (inserted by Finance Act, 2016) — mandates Central Government to set inflation target in consultation with RBI, once every five years. [S2][S3] - Inflation measured by: Consumer Price Index (CPI) — Combined (headline retail inflation).

The Inflation Target

Parameter Value
Target 4%
Upper tolerance 6%
Lower tolerance 2%
Current mandate period April 1, 2026 – March 31, 2031
Issuing authority Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance
Notified via Gazette of India

Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)

Feature Detail
Total members 6
RBI-side members 3 — Governor (ex-officio Chair), Deputy Governor (monetary policy), one RBI Officer
Government-nominated members 3 — experts in economics/banking/finance/monetary policy
Tenure of govt. nominees 4 years, not eligible for re-appointment
Minimum meetings per year 4
Decision mechanism Majority vote; Governor has casting vote in case of tie
Appointing body for govt. nominees Central Government on recommendation of a Search-cum-Selection Committee

Accountability / Failure Clause (Section 45ZN) - RBI is deemed to have failed if average CPI inflation breaches the tolerance band (>6% or <2%) for three consecutive quarters. - On failure, RBI must submit a report to the Government stating: reasons for failure; remedial actions proposed; estimated time to return to target. [S2][S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Administrative

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. The inflation-targeting framework for RBI is enabled under Section 45ZA of the RBI Act, 1934, inserted by the Finance Act, 2016. [S2][S3]
  2. The inflation target is set by the Central Government in consultation with RBI, not by RBI unilaterally. [S2]
  3. The target is measured using Consumer Price Index (CPI) — Combined (retail/headline inflation, not WPI). [S2]
  4. Current target: 4%, upper tolerance: 6%, lower tolerance: 2% — valid from April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2031. [S1][S4]
  5. The first inflation target was set for the period August 5, 2016 to March 31, 2021. [S2][S3]
  6. The MPC has 6 members3 from RBI (Governor as Chair, Deputy Governor, one officer) and 3 government-appointed external experts. [S2][S3]
  7. Government-nominated MPC members serve a 4-year term and are not eligible for re-appointment. [S2]
  8. RBI is deemed to have failed its inflation mandate if average inflation stays outside the 2–6% band for three consecutive quarters. [S2][S3]
  9. MPC must meet at least 4 times per year; minutes and individual voting records are published within 14 days of each meeting. [S2]
  10. The Urjit Patel Committee (2014) recommended the shift to CPI-based inflation targeting with a 4% midpoint. [S6]
  11. The March 2026 notification was issued by the Department of Economic Affairs (DEA), Ministry of Finance. [S1][S4]
  12. The 2026 renewal is the second renewal — making it the third consecutive five-year mandate at 4% ± 2%. [S4]
  13. In the event of a tie in MPC voting, the RBI Governor has a casting vote. [S2]
  14. India's retail CPI inflation fell to a four-year low of 5.4% in FY2024. [S5]
  15. RBI published a Discussion Paper on Review of Monetary Policy Framework in August 2025 ahead of the renewal. [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy — monetary policy, inflation, RBI, banking sector regulation
GS-II Statutory bodies — RBI; government–institution relationship; accountability mechanisms

Plausible Mains Questions

  1. "The Monetary Policy Committee framework has fundamentally altered the character of monetary policy in India. Critically analyse its design, achievements, and limitations since 2016." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "The Centre's decision to retain the 4% inflation target till 2031 reflects continuity over reform. Do you agree? Discuss in the context of India's growth-inflation dynamics." (GS-III, 10 marks)
  3. "Examine the accountability mechanisms built into India's inflation-targeting framework and assess how they balance RBI's independence with democratic oversight." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Monetary Policy Committee — Composition & Powers Direct institutional link; frequently tested alongside this topic
RBI Act, 1934 — Key Sections Section 45ZA–45ZL is the statutory basis for the entire framework
Consumer Price Index vs. WPI Understanding why CPI (not WPI) was chosen as the anchor is a common question
FRBM Act, 2003 and Fiscal-Monetary Coordination Framework interacts with fiscal policy; deficit monetisation debate
Repo Rate, Reverse Repo, SDF — Monetary Instruments MPC uses repo rate as the primary instrument to achieve the 4% target
Urjit Patel Committee Report (2014) Origin of recommendations that became the 2016 framework
Inflation in India — Components, Measurement, Drivers Needed to contextualise why 4% is chosen and when it is breached
Central Bank Independence — Global Comparisons Broader governance debate; India's model vs. Fed, ECB, Bank of England

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong instrument: Students confuse the target (set by government = CPI 4%) with the instrument (set by MPC = repo rate). The government does not set the repo rate.
  2. WPI vs. CPI: The inflation target is based on CPI (retail), not WPI. WPI is a producer-price index and is not the anchor for monetary policy.
  3. Who sets the target: The target is set by the Central Government in consultation with RBI — NOT by RBI alone or the MPC alone.
  4. First mandate start date: The first mandate ran from August 5, 2016 (not April 1, 2016) — because the Finance Act received Presidential assent mid-year; the April 2026 mandate is the third period.
  5. Failure definition: Inflation "failure" requires three consecutive quarters outside the band — not a single quarter breach. Missing this nuance is a common Prelims trap.
  6. MPC member tenure confusion: External (government-appointed) members serve 4 years and cannot be reappointed; RBI-side members serve as long as they hold their RBI position — the two tenures are different.

11. Sources