Risk Signals, Not Reassurance from RBI’s GDP, CPI Projections

RBI’s latest projections acknowledge a harder macro trade-off, with external shocks reviving inflation risks and forcing policy into a more conditional, risk-managed stance.

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By BasisPoint Groupthink

Groupthink is the House View of BasisPoint’s in-house columnists.

April 8, 2026 at 10:43 AM IST

The Reserve Bank of India’s latest policy communication marks a shift in tone from sequencing recovery to managing uncertainty. What had been a relatively stable macro configuration, with easing inflation and steady growth, has been unsettled by geopolitical disruptions that now sit at the centre of the policy framework. The numbers themselves are not surprising. The framing is.

GDP Growth is now projected at 6.9% for 2026-27, down from 7.6% in the previous year, while inflation is expected to rise to 4.6%. This is not merely a recalibration of forecasts. It is an acknowledgement that the growth-inflation trade-off has re-emerged after a period in which both variables were moving in a favourable direction. The trigger is external, but the implications are domestic and immediate.

The emphasis on the Strait of Hormuz is instructive. It signals that the RBI is not treating the West Asia conflict as a transient geopolitical event, but as a structural risk to supply chains, energy prices and, by extension, macro stability. Oil at $85 per barrel is not just an assumption embedded in a model. It is a policy constraint. Should prices move higher, the RBI’s own projections show growth slipping further, even as inflation risks intensify.

External Shock
The external channel is doing most of the work here. Higher energy prices feed directly into inflation, while disruptions to shipping routes raise logistics costs and compress export competitiveness. Financial conditions, already sensitive to global risk sentiment, are likely to tighten if volatility persists. The RBI’s articulation of these risks is unusually explicit, suggesting a deliberate attempt to foreground uncertainty rather than smooth it over.

What stands out is the central bank’s willingness to quantify downside scenarios. The projection that growth could fall to 6.7% in 2026-27 under higher oil prices, and further to 6.4% in 2027-28, is not standard forward guidance. It is risk mapping. By laying out conditional outcomes, the RBI is signalling that policy will be contingent, not pre-committed.

This matters because it reframes the role of monetary policy. In a supply-driven shock, rate changes have limited traction on the source of inflation. The policy response therefore shifts from active calibration to managing second-round effects, anchoring expectations, and ensuring that financial conditions do not amplify the shock.

Policy Posture
The decision to hold the repo rate at 5.25% reflects this recalibration. Describing the stance as “wait and watch” understates the degree of vigilance embedded in the communication. The RBI is effectively signalling a bidirectional readiness, to tighten if inflation expectations drift, or to support growth if external conditions deteriorate more sharply than anticipated.

The introduction of explicit core inflation projections adds another layer to this framework. At 4.4%, and lower when excluding precious metals, underlying price pressures appear contained. This gives the RBI some room to look through transient supply shocks. Yet the distinction between headline and core inflation becomes harder to sustain when energy costs persistently feed into broader price formation.

Domestic conditions offer some counterweight. Services momentum, improving capacity utilisation in manufacturing, and stronger balance sheets in both banks and corporates provide a degree of resilience. The reference to GST rationalisation and rabi output suggests that the RBI still sees internal demand as broadly intact. The risk is that external shocks erode this cushion faster than anticipated.

What the policy ultimately conveys is not reassurance, but a shift in operating doctrine. The RBI is moving away from a narrative of sequential normalisation to one of continuous risk assessment. The communication reflects a central bank that is less concerned with guiding markets towards a predefined path and more focused on retaining optionality in a fluid environment.

The immediate market reaction, aided by a ceasefire-driven fall in oil prices, offers some relief. Yet the RBI’s message is clear. The baseline is fragile, the risks are asymmetric, and policy will respond to incoming data rather than prior intent. In that sense, the latest statement is less about where the economy stands and more about how uncertain the road ahead has become.