In a year marked by global trade disruptions and volatile markets, the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) latest policy has drawn close attention from investors, bankers, and everyday savers.
The October 2025 Monetary Policy Meeting was more than just a routine rate review—it was a careful effort to balance economic growth with price stability.
While many central banks across the world are still battling high inflation, India faces the opposite challenge—record-low price growth and a strong domestic economy.
Under Governor Sanjay Malhotra, the RBI decided to keep the repo rate unchanged at 5.5%. Alongside this, the central bank unveiled a set of forward-looking reforms aimed at strengthening India’s financial system for the long term.
Over the last two years, India has faced several global shocks—from swings in crude oil prices to new U.S. tariffs.
During its meeting from September 29 to October 1, 2025, the RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) focused on maintaining stability through careful liquidity management and data-driven decisions.
Earlier this year, the RBI cut rates three times, totaling 100 basis points. This helped boost consumer spending and investment.
Even with this growth, inflation dropped sharply—to a nine-year low of 1.5% in September 2025, far below the 4% target. This was supported by GST 2.0 reforms, a good monsoon, and lower global commodity prices.
With inflation under control and growth steady, the RBI’s neutral stance now reflects a twin focus—supporting growth and preserving stability.
India’s economy remains strong, with Q1 FY26 GDP growth at 7.8% and FY26 growth projected at 6.8%, making it one of the fastest-growing major economies.
This section explains when and why changes to the RBI policy were needed, and details exactly what these changes entail.
By keeping rates steady, the RBI signals confidence in the current policy mix.
This allows earlier rate cuts to work their way through the credit system. With headline CPI inflation projected at 2.6% for FY26, India’s macroeconomic picture remains comfortably within the 2–6% tolerance band.
The changes took effect after the 57th MPC meeting (Sept 29–Oct 1, 2025).
Major regulatory reforms announced alongside will roll out by FY26, focusing on:
The RBI’s new approach introduces a refined monetary framework built around a “dual mandate”—price stability first, growth second.
This streamlined focus brings India closer to global central banking standards.
In addition, the RBI has begun direct oversight of fintech and AI-driven lending platforms.
This shift marks a move from government-led panels like the FSLRC to proactive RBI supervision, promoting tech-enabled and transparent financial governance.
With low inflation and healthy growth, India’s position stands out globally.
While advanced economies are still fighting high prices, India is experiencing mild deflation in food costs.
Analysts believe the RBI could announce one more small rate cut (25 basis points) before March 2026 if disinflation continues.
Meanwhile, stronger banking regulations under new AI and Basel frameworks will improve system security and financial inclusion—especially for MSMEs and rural borrowers.
The markets have reacted positively:
The October 2025 policy marks a clear shift in how the RBI manages the economy, discipline and innovation together.
By keeping rates stable while pushing structural reforms, the RBI has shown that growth and stability can go hand in hand.
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Q1. Why did the RBI keep the repo rate unchanged at 5.5%?
Because inflation is below the 4% target, and the RBI wants earlier rate cuts to fully benefit borrowers and markets.
The RBI expects FY26 GDP growth of 6.8%, supported by strong domestic demand, public investment, and stable prices.
It gives inflation control top priority, with growth as a secondary goal—similar to the frameworks used by leading global central banks.
Yes, a small 25 bps cut is possible by December 2025 if inflation stays low and credit transmission improves.
Banking, MSME lending, consumer durables, infrastructure, and housing loans will likely benefit from steady liquidity and affordable credit.
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