RBI holds policy rate, FY26 inflation outlook seen at 2.1%

Here is the complete UPSC study note:


RBI Holds Policy Rate | FY26 Inflation Outlook at 2.1%


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1934 RBI Act enacted; RBI established as central bank
1935 RBI commences operations
2016 RBI Act amended — statutory basis for MPC & Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework; inflation target of 4% ± 2% set
2016 First MPC constituted; repo rate made the key policy rate
2023–24 Repo rate peaked at 6.5% as RBI tightened to combat post-COVID inflation
Aug 2025 RBI begins rate-cut cycle; FY26 CPI forecast lowered to 2.6% [S1]
Feb 2026 Rate held at 5.25%; FY26 inflation forecast revised to ~2.1% [S2]

4. Core Static Facts

Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) - Constituted under: Section 45ZB of the RBI Act, 1934 (inserted by Finance Act, 2016) - Composition: 6 members — 3 RBI officials (Governor as ex-officio Chairperson + 2 Deputy Governors/officers) + 3 external members appointed by Central Government - Inflation target: 4% CPI with a ±2% tolerance band (i.e., 2%–6%); set by Central Government in consultation with RBI every 5 years - Failure trigger: Inflation outside band for 3 consecutive quarters — RBI must submit report to Government explaining failure and remedial action - Meeting frequency: Bi-monthly (at minimum 4 meetings/year); decisions by majority vote; Governor has casting vote in tie

Policy Instruments (rate corridor)

Rate Current Level (Feb 2026)
Policy Repo Rate 5.25% [S2]
SDF (floor) 5.00% (typically repo – 25 bps)
MSF (ceiling) 5.50% (typically repo + 25 bps)
CRR Separate instrument; not changed in this meeting

Inflation Data Points - FY26 CPI (full year) forecast: ~2.1% [S2] - CPI Q1FY27 (revised): 4.0% [S2] - CPI Q2FY27 (revised): 4.2% [S2] - July 2025 CPI: 1.6% (8-year low); driven by food deflation of ~10.5% sustained over 9 months [S1]

Growth Projections - FY26 real GDP: ~6.8% [S1] - FY27: ~6.6% (assuming normal monsoon and stable global conditions) [S1] - Q1FY27 and Q2FY27 projections revised upward in Feb 2026 statement [S2]

Key Actors - RBI Governor: Sanjay Malhotra [S2] - Implementing body: Reserve Bank of India (Monetary Policy Department) - Stance: Neutral (neither accommodative nor tightening bias)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Governance / Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Geopolitical / Strategic


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The MPC is constituted under Section 45ZB of the RBI Act, 1934, inserted via the Finance Act, 2016. [S1]
  2. The MPC has 6 members — 3 from RBI (including Governor) + 3 external members appointed by Central Government. [S1]
  3. India's inflation target is 4% CPI ± 2% (band: 2%–6%), set jointly by RBI and Central Government. [S1]
  4. As of February 7, 2026, the policy repo rate stands at 5.25% with a neutral stance. [S2]
  5. The MPC voted unanimously (6-0) to hold the rate in the February 2026 meeting. [S2]
  6. FY26 CPI inflation forecast: approximately 2.1% — well below the 4% target. [S2]
  7. India's CPI touched an 8-year low of 1.6% in July 2025. [S1]
  8. The primary driver of FY26 low inflation was food price deflation of ~10.5% over 9 consecutive months — longest in CPI series. [S1]
  9. Upward revision in Q1/Q2 FY27 inflation outlook attributed to precious metals prices contributing 60–70 basis points. [S2]
  10. If CPI remains outside 2–6% band for 3 consecutive quarters, RBI must submit an explanatory report to the Central Government. [S1]
  11. RBI Governor as of February 2026: Sanjay Malhotra. [S2]
  12. FY26 real GDP growth projected at ~6.8%; FY27 at ~6.6%. [S1]
  13. The Urjit Patel Committee (2014) recommended adopting CPI-based inflation targeting in India — precursor to the 2016 FIT framework.
  14. The Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) rate forms the ceiling of the interest rate corridor; SDF (Standing Deposit Facility) forms the floor.
  15. "Neutral stance" means RBI is neither committed to rate cuts nor hikes — it can move in either direction based on data. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper → GS-III: Indian Economy - Syllabus headings: Monetary Policy; Role of RBI; Inflation and its Management; Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilisation of Resources, Growth, Development and Employment

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "Examine the structure and functioning of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) under the Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework. How has India's disinflation in FY26 tested the framework's design?" (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "With CPI inflation well below the 4% target in FY26, should the RBI shift to a growth-supportive accommodative stance? Critically evaluate with reference to external sector vulnerabilities." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "Discuss the tension between low food inflation (benefiting consumers) and low food prices (hurting farmers). How should monetary policy account for this structural duality in India's inflation management?" (GS-III/GS-I, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) Framework Statutory basis of MPC; 4% target; failure accountability mechanism
Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) & Interest Rate Corridor Repo, SDF, MSF — the operational framework within which repo rate works
CPI vs WPI — Inflation Measurement RBI targets CPI; understanding components (food, fuel, core) is essential
Transmission of Monetary Policy in India Why repo rate changes don't immediately reflect in bank lending rates; structural friction
External Sector & Capital Flows RBI's "external headwinds" reference; BoP, rupee, and monetary policy interdependence
GDP Data Rebasing Governor's reference to "new data series" — MOSPI rebasing exercise, base year revision
Urjit Patel Committee Report (2014) Foundational recommendation for FIT; MCQ frequently tested
RBI Act, 1934 — Relevant Sections Sections 45ZB–45ZL on MPC; Section 17 (business RBI may transact)

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong rate cited: Aspirants confuse the repo rate (5.25%) with the reverse repo rate (which has been replaced by the SDF since April 2022). The reverse repo is no longer the operative floor — the SDF is. Do not write "reverse repo rate" in Mains answers.

  2. MPC composition error: A common trap is saying RBI has 4 members or Government has 4. Correct: 3 RBI + 3 Government-appointed external members = 6 total. Governor chairs and has casting vote.

  3. Inflation target confusion: The target is 4% ± 2% — the target is 4%, not 6%. The 6% is the upper tolerance limit. Breaching above 6% or below 2% for 3 consecutive quarters triggers failure, not merely exceeding 4%.

  4. Confusing FY26 CPI (2.1%) with the inflation target (4%): Some aspirants write India has missed its inflation target; actually India is below the lower tolerance band (2%), which is also technically a breach — but this nuance is rarely discussed in exam questions.

  5. Attributing the rate hold to tightening: A "hold" at 5.25% in a neutral stance is NOT tightening. Tightening would mean raising the rate. Neutral means the MPC is waiting to see conditions evolve — a critical distinction for analytical Mains answers.


11. Sources