What Happened
- The six-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), chaired by RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra, voted unanimously to keep the policy repo rate unchanged at 5.25% at its April 6–8, 2026 meeting — the first bi-monthly review of FY2026–27
- The policy stance was retained as "neutral," signalling that the MPC is neither leaning toward rate cuts nor hikes, and will be data-driven
- Governor Malhotra stated: "Headline inflation remains our target, and managing that is our primary goal" — underscoring the RBI's price stability mandate amid crude-oil-driven inflationary pressures
- The RBI projected CPI inflation for FY2026–27 at 4.6%, with a peak of 5.2% in Q3 FY27, before moderating; GDP growth projected at 6.9% for FY27
- West Asia conflict was cited as the primary source of uncertainty, with the RBI flagging risks to the Current Account Deficit (CAD), remittance flows, export demand, and overall financial market stability
- This was the third consecutive meeting at which the MPC held the repo rate steady
Static Topic Bridges
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) — Composition, Mandate, and Decision-Making
The MPC was established under Section 45ZB of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934, inserted by the Finance Act, 2016. It replaced the earlier system where the RBI Governor alone set policy rates. The MPC's statutory mandate is to maintain CPI inflation at the target level set by the Central Government (currently 4% ± 2%) while supporting growth.
- Statutory basis: RBI Act, 1934, Sections 45ZA (inflation target) to 45ZL (MPC procedures), inserted by Finance Act, 2016
- Composition: 6 members — Governor (Chairperson, ex officio); Deputy Governor in charge of monetary policy (ex officio); one RBI officer nominated by the Central Board (ex officio); three external members appointed by the Central Government for four-year terms (not eligible for reappointment)
- Decision: each member has one vote; in case of a tie, the Governor has a casting vote
- Meetings: minimum four times per year (at least once per quarter); meetings are of three days; resolution published after each meeting
- Inflation target of 4% (±2% band): set by the Central Government under Section 45ZA; valid for five years (renewed periodically)
Connection to this news: The unanimous vote to hold at 5.25% demonstrates the MPC's collective judgment that elevated crude-oil-driven inflationary risks outweigh the case for a rate cut to support growth — a core trade-off in monetary policy.
Policy Repo Rate and the Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism
The repo rate is the rate at which the RBI lends short-term funds to commercial banks against government securities. When the repo rate changes, it transmits through the financial system: banks' marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR), benchmark lending rates for loans (home loans, auto loans, personal loans, working capital), and deposit rates all adjust over time. This is the monetary policy transmission mechanism.
- Repo rate (April 2026): 5.25% (unchanged); Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) rate: 5.00%; Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) rate: 5.50%; Bank Rate: 5.50%
- Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) corridor: from SDF (floor) to MSF (ceiling); repo rate sits in the middle
- MCLR is the minimum rate below which banks cannot lend (except for specific categories); linked to repo rate with a lag
- External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR): since October 2019, all new floating-rate loans for retail and MSME are linked to an external benchmark (RBI repo rate or T-bill rates), making transmission faster
- Transmission lag: typically 2–3 quarters for full impact of repo rate change to show up in bank lending rates and economic activity
Connection to this news: The RBI's pause means EMIs on floating-rate loans remain unchanged, providing stability to borrowers — but the elevated inflation from crude oil prices still increases the real cost of living.
Neutral Monetary Policy Stance — Definition and Implications
The RBI's monetary policy stance signals the direction of future rate movements to market participants. The three possible stances are: "accommodative" (future rate cuts possible), "neutral" (data-dependent; neither cuts nor hikes predetermined), and "withdrawal of accommodation" / "hawkish" (future rate hikes or tightening possible). A neutral stance gives the MPC maximum flexibility.
- The RBI shifted from "withdrawal of accommodation" to "neutral" stance in October 2024, signalling the end of the tightening cycle
- Neutral stance allows the MPC to cut or hold depending on incoming inflation and growth data
- The repo rate was cut by 25 basis points in February 2026 (from 5.50% to 5.25%) and then held in subsequent meetings
- Current account and inflation pressures from West Asia prevented any further cuts at the April 2026 meeting
Connection to this news: Retaining the "neutral" stance despite significant inflationary headwinds signals that the RBI is keeping the option of future cuts open once the West Asia situation stabilises and inflation moderates.
Key Facts & Data
- Repo rate (April 2026): 5.25% (unanimous hold)
- Policy stance: Neutral (unchanged)
- SDF rate: 5.00%; MSF rate: 5.50%; Bank Rate: 5.50%
- RBI FY27 CPI inflation projection: 4.6% (peak: 5.2% in Q3 FY27)
- RBI FY27 GDP growth projection: 6.9%
- MPC legal basis: RBI Act 1934, Sections 45ZA–45ZL (inserted via Finance Act, 2016)
- Inflation target: 4% (±2% band of 2%–6%)
- Total MPC members: 6 (3 RBI, 3 external); quorum: 4 members
- This was the third consecutive meeting with an unchanged rate
- Meeting dates: April 6–8, 2026 (first bi-monthly review of FY2026–27)
- Governor: Sanjay Malhotra (took charge December 2024)