The central bank said “upside risks to the inflation outlook have increased”, driven by energy prices and possible weather-related disruptions, even though headline inflation remains contained for now. CPI inflation for 2026-27 is projected at 4.6%, with Q3 seen at 5.2%.

The Reserve Bank of India’s April policy minutes show that the central bank is increasingly concerned that the economy is entering a more difficult phase, with the monetary policy committee (MPC) warning that “the economy is confronted with a supply shock” as the West Asia conflict raises fresh risks to both inflation and growth.
The minutes, released on April 22, offer a deeper read on the thinking behind the MPC’s April 8 decision and make clear that the central bank now sees a more complicated macroeconomic backdrop than it did just weeks ago.
The RBI said the outbreak of conflict in West Asia has led to “severe disruption of global supply chains”, posing an “unprecedented challenge” to the global economy in the form of “higher prices and lower global growth.”
For India, the central bank flagged multiple transmission channels — elevated energy and commodity prices, supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz, higher freight and insurance costs, softer exports and tighter financial conditions. It said these developments would “act as a drag on domestic production in 2026-27” and could also weigh on merchandise exports if the conflict turns prolonged.
The minutes show that the RBI is confronting a classic policy dilemma: upside risks to inflation, but downside risks to growth.
The central bank said “upside risks to the inflation outlook have increased”, driven by energy prices and possible weather-related disruptions, even though headline inflation remains contained for now. CPI inflation for 2026-27 is projected at 4.6%, with Q3 seen at 5.2%.
At the same time, growth is expected to slow. The RBI now projects real GDP growth for 2026-27 at 6.9%, down from an estimated 7.6% in 2025-26. It said the West Asia conflict “will adversely impact growth”, even though domestic demand remains supported by private consumption, investment, services activity and healthy balance sheets.
The minutes make clear that the MPC sees the present shock as supply-driven rather than demand-led, which limits the usefulness of an immediate policy response.
In its rationale, the RBI said “it is prudent to wait and watch the changing circumstances and the evolving growth-inflation outlook.”
That caution runs through the individual member statements as well. One member warned that “the risks of a policy mistake have heightened amidst this uncertainty”, while another argued that for a supply shock, “looking through the shock is optimal since any pre-emptive response merely sacrifices output without delivering any significant gain on the inflation front.”
The biggest takeaway from the minutes is not that the RBI held rates — that is already known. It is that the central bank now sees the economy caught in a more delicate balance.
Inflation is still within the tolerance band, but the comfort is fading. Growth remains resilient, but the downside risks are building. In effect, the minutes show an RBI that is staying flexible because the nature of the shock makes a quick policy move riskier than waiting for more clarity.