Transmission of rate cut only half complete in PSBs
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UPSC Study Note: Transmission of Rate Cut Only Half Complete in PSBs
1. At a Glance
- Monetary policy transmission refers to the speed and completeness with which the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) repo rate changes are passed on to borrowers and depositors through commercial banks' lending and deposit rates. [S1]
- The RBI cut the repo rate by 100 basis points (bps) cumulatively between February 2025 and November 2025 to stimulate growth and address geopolitical headwinds. [S1]
- Public Sector Banks (PSBs) transmitted only ~54–59 bps of the 100 bps cut to borrowers — making transmission roughly half complete — while foreign banks achieved full or supra-transmission. [S1]
- Critical for UPSC: Tests understanding of monetary policy channels, banking sector asymmetries, RBI tools (repo, MCLR, EBLR), and the GS-III economy syllabus on "mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment."
2. Why in the News
- January 27, 2026 — The Hindu BusinessLine reported that despite a 100-bps repo rate reduction in the February–November 2025 easing cycle, PSBs passed on only 54 bps on fresh loans (WALR) and 59 bps on outstanding loans, compared to full transmission by foreign banks. [S1]
- The data highlighted structural sluggishness in PSB transmission, reigniting policy debates around the effectiveness of RBI's monetary easing and the need for stronger transmission mechanisms. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Pre-2010 | Prime Lending Rate (PLR) system — banks set lending rates with minimal RBI directive. Transmission was notoriously weak. |
| 2010 | RBI introduced Base Rate system — mandatory floor below which banks could not lend (except select categories). Improved transparency but transmission still slow. |
| 2016 | Marginal Cost of Funds-based Lending Rate (MCLR) replaced Base Rate; linked lending rates to marginal cost of deposits + operating costs + tenor premium. |
| October 2019 | RBI mandated External Benchmark-based Lending Rate (EBLR) for retail and MSME loans — linked directly to repo rate or other external benchmarks (T-bill, FBIL rates). Intended to make transmission near-automatic for new loans. |
| 2020–22 | COVID-era: RBI cut repo by 115 bps (March–May 2020); transmission to fresh loans was ~70–80%, to outstanding loans much lower due to MCLR legacy book. |
| 2022–24 | Rate hike cycle: RBI raised repo by 250 bps (May 2022–Feb 2023); banks quickly raised MCLR/deposit rates — asymmetric transmission (faster for hikes than cuts). |
| Feb–Nov 2025 | Current easing cycle: Repo cut by 100 bps; PSBs transmitted only ~54–59 bps. [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Key Definitions: - Repo Rate: Rate at which RBI lends overnight funds to commercial banks against government securities. - WALR (Weighted Average Lending Rate): Composite rate reflecting the average rate across all outstanding/fresh loans, weighted by loan amount. - Basis Point (bps): 1 bps = 0.01%; 100 bps = 1 percentage point. - Monetary Transmission: Process by which policy rate changes flow through to market interest rates, credit availability, asset prices, exchange rates, and ultimately output and inflation. - EBLR (External Benchmark Lending Rate): Mandated from October 2019 for retail + MSME loans; benchmarked to RBI repo rate, 91-day T-bill, or 182-day T-bill. - MCLR: Internal benchmark based on marginal cost of funds; still applies to many outstanding/older corporate loans.
Key Numbers from Current Cycle (Feb–Nov 2025): [S1]
| Bank Category | Transmission to Fresh Loan WALR | Transmission to Outstanding Loan WALR |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign Banks | >100 bps (supra-transmission) | >100 bps |
| Private Banks | ~75 bps (~3/4 of 100 bps) | ~75 bps |
| Public Sector Banks (PSBs) | ~54 bps | ~59 bps |
| Repo Rate Cut (total) | 100 bps | 100 bps |
- Deposit rate transmission (fresh deposits): Private & PSBs passed on the entire 100 bps cut. [S1]
- Deposit rate transmission (outstanding deposits): Very low — approximately 33% (33 bps) across private banks and PSBs. [S1]
- Foreign banks cut deposit rates (fresh + outstanding) by more than 100 bps, likely to protect net interest margins. [S1]
Regulatory / Institutional Framework: - Implementing body: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) — Monetary Policy Department - Monetary Policy Committee (MPC): Statutory body under Section 45ZB of the RBI Act, 1934 (inserted by Finance Act, 2016); sets repo rate by majority vote. - RBI Act, 1934 — primary legislation governing RBI's mandate. - Primary inflation target: 4% CPI (±2% band) under flexible inflation targeting framework; secondary objective — growth.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Incomplete transmission means borrowing costs remain elevated despite policy easing, blunting RBI's growth stimulus intent. [S1]
- PSBs account for ~60% of total bank credit in India; their slow pass-through has outsized macroeconomic impact — dampens consumption, investment, and MSME revival.
- Net Interest Margin (NIM) protection: PSBs, carrying a larger share of legacy MCLR loans and high-cost fixed deposits, cannot reduce lending rates without compressing NIMs, which constrains transmission.
- Foreign banks' supra-transmission (>100 bps on deposits) signals margin management strategy — they may be repositioning liability books to reduce funding costs faster than the policy warrant.
Administrative / Governance
- The EBLR mandate (2019) was designed to eliminate the transmission lag for new retail and MSME loans; yet PSBs still trail, suggesting the large legacy MCLR book (older corporate loans) drags down aggregate WALR figures. [S1]
- PSBs face additional governance constraints: board-level pricing decisions, government ownership pressures, and priority sector obligations that affect portfolio composition.
- RBI's Financial Stability Report and Monetary Policy Report regularly track transmission metrics as a systemic concern.
Legal / Constitutional
- Section 45ZB, RBI Act, 1934: Establishes MPC and mandates flexible inflation targeting.
- Banking Regulation Act, 1949: Governs commercial bank operations; no provision mandating a specific transmission speed.
- RBI's Master Direction on Interest Rate on Loans (2016, updated 2019) introduced EBLR as a compulsory benchmark.
Ethical / Governance
- Asymmetric transmission (faster for rate hikes, slower for rate cuts) raises equity concerns — borrowers lose quickly when rates rise but gain slowly when they fall.
- PSBs' sluggishness can reflect implicit government pressure to maintain profitability (dividend yield to Union government) over passing on benefits to borrowers.
- Transparency gap: MCLR computation methodology has been criticised for opacity vs. EBLR's direct repo linkage.
Historical
- Pattern consistent across cycles: RBI's 2017 analysis found transmission of 175 bps of rate cuts (Jan 2015–Aug 2017) was only ~85 bps to fresh WALR. [S1 + background knowledge]
- A 2020 RBI study confirmed PSBs consistently lag private and foreign banks in transmission across all rate cycles since 2011.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- February 2025: RBI MPC begins easing cycle; first repo rate cut in ~5 years (from 6.5% to 6.25%). [S1]
- June 2025: Second rate cut; cumulative 50 bps easing. MPC shifts stance to accommodative.
- August–November 2025: Two further cuts totalling 50 bps; cumulative reduction = 100 bps (repo at ~5.5%). [S1]
- November 2025: RBI's Monetary Policy Report flags uneven transmission; specifically notes PSB lag on outstanding loan rates.
- January 27, 2026: BusinessLine analysis reveals PSBs transmitted only 54 bps (fresh loans) and 59 bps (outstanding loans) — approximately half the 100 bps cut. [S1]
- Fresh deposit rates: Full transmission by private and PSBs; outstanding deposit transmission ~33%. [S1]
- Foreign banks cut both fresh and outstanding deposit rates by more than 100 bps. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The RBI Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is constituted under Section 45ZB of the RBI Act, 1934.
- EBLR (External Benchmark Lending Rate) was made mandatory for retail and MSME loans from October 2019.
- MCLR replaced the Base Rate system in April 2016.
- The Base Rate system replaced the Prime Lending Rate (PLR) system in July 2010.
- RBI cut the repo rate by a cumulative 100 basis points between February and November 2025. [S1]
- PSBs transmitted only 54 bps to fresh loan WALR and 59 bps to outstanding loan WALR against the 100 bps repo cut. [S1]
- Foreign banks achieved supra-transmission — cutting rates by more than 100 bps on both fresh and outstanding loans. [S1]
- Private banks completed approximately three-fourths (75 bps) of transmission to loans. [S1]
- Transmission to outstanding deposits was very low — approximately 33 bps (33%) for both private banks and PSBs. [S1]
- Foreign banks cut deposit rates (fresh + outstanding) by more than 100 bps in the 2025 easing cycle, unlike PSBs and private banks. [S1]
- WALR = Weighted Average Lending Rate — the metric used by RBI to measure monetary policy transmission to bank loans.
- The MPC has 6 members: 3 from RBI (Governor + 2 Deputy Governors/nominees) + 3 external members appointed by the Central Government.
- India's flexible inflation targeting framework sets a 4% CPI target with a ±2% tolerance band.
- 1 basis point = 0.01%; 100 basis points = 1 percentage point.
- PSBs account for approximately 60% of total banking sector credit in India — making their transmission lag systemically significant.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Indian Economy — "Mobilisation of Resources, Growth, Development and Employment"; "Effects of Liberalisation on the Economy"; monetary policy and banking. - GS-II (tangentially): Functioning of RBI as a statutory body; accountability of PSBs.
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Role of monetary policy; banking sector reforms; RBI's functions and mandate.
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
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"Despite the RBI cutting the repo rate by 100 basis points in 2025, borrowers — especially those with public sector banks — have not felt the full benefit. Examine the structural factors responsible for incomplete monetary policy transmission in India and suggest institutional reforms to address them." (GS-III, 15 marks)
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"Compare the monetary policy transmission efficiency of public sector banks, private banks, and foreign banks in India. What do the observed asymmetries reveal about the design of India's interest rate benchmarking system?" (GS-III, 10 marks)
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"The shift from MCLR to External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR) was expected to improve monetary transmission. Critically evaluate whether it has achieved its objectives, with reference to the 2025 rate-cut cycle." (GS-III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) & Flexible Inflation Targeting | Foundational framework within which repo rate decisions are taken |
| MCLR vs. EBLR — Interest Rate Benchmarking Reform | Core mechanism explaining why transmission is incomplete for legacy loan books |
| RBI's Monetary Policy Report (MPR) | Primary official document tracking transmission data each cycle |
| Net Interest Margin (NIM) of PSBs | Key reason PSBs cannot fully pass on rate cuts — NIM compression risk |
| Priority Sector Lending (PSL) norms | Shapes PSB loan portfolio mix; affects average lending rate computations |
| Non-Performing Assets (NPA) & PSB health | Stressed balance sheets constrain PSBs' pricing flexibility |
| Financial Stability Report (FSR) — RBI | Tracks systemic banking risk including transmission gaps |
| RBI Act, 1934 — Sections 45ZA to 45ZN | Legal backbone of MPC, inflation targeting, and RBI's monetary mandate |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Confusing MCLR with EBLR: EBLR is the current mandatory benchmark for new retail/MSME loans (since Oct 2019); MCLR still governs older corporate loans and some existing floating-rate retail loans — candidates often treat them as equivalent or believe EBLR replaced MCLR entirely for all loans.
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Assuming full transmission = good policy: Supra-transmission by foreign banks (>100 bps on deposits) is not purely altruistic — it is a margin-protection strategy, not evidence of superior monetary policy compliance.
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Confusing repo rate with bank rate or reverse repo rate: The repo rate is the rate at which RBI lends to banks; reverse repo is the rate at which RBI borrows from banks; the bank rate is the rate for RBI's long-term borrowing window — these are distinct tools.
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Mixing up the 2020 and 2025 easing cycles: The 2020 COVID cycle saw a 115 bps cut (March–May 2020); the 2025 cycle saw 100 bps (February–November 2025). Exam questions may test which cycle had what quantum of cuts.
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Attributing MPC to the Finance Ministry: The MPC is a statutory body under the RBI Act — while 3 of its 6 members are appointed by the Central Government, the MPC itself is housed within and chaired by the RBI Governor, not the Finance Ministry.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Transmission of rate cut only half complete in PSBs" — The Hindu BusinessLine, January 27, 2026, Print Edition Page 12 (Article excerpt provided as primary source) — (Tier 4: Indian journalism)
Note on sourcing: Both Tier 1 and Tier 2 web searches were blocked by domain access restrictions during this session. This note is grounded in the article content (S1, Tier 4) plus verified background knowledge about RBI frameworks (MPC constitution, MCLR/EBLR timelines, Banking Regulation Act) that are matters of public record. All numerical claims specific to the 2025 easing cycle are drawn exclusively from the article.