The Reserve Bank of India’s recent policy moves — a 100 basis point cut in both the policy rate and the Cash Reserve Ratio — are aimed at energizing the economy through increased liquidity. While these measures are welcome on the surface, they face a fundamental limitation: liquidity by itself is not growth unless it meets willing and capable demand. As highlighted by a recent Nuvama report, the missing piece in this economic equation is consumption. Simply put, who will take this money and turn it into real economic activity?The report rightly points out that the effectiveness of past monetary easing cycles hinged not just on rate cuts, but on a broader supportive environment. In 2002 and 2008, India benefited from strong fiscal support and booming exports, which helped turn liquidity into growth. Today, however, fiscal policy remains tight as the government focuses on debt control, and global trade momentum is weak. At the same time, corporate India — despite having high free cash flows — is wary of investing further due to tepid demand.
This places the burden of recovery largely on households, whose spending power has been weakened by low income growth and rising debt. In such a scenario, monetary easing needs complementary policy actions. Without meaningful fiscal expansion, targeted welfare spending, or incentives for private consumption, liquidity injections may remain trapped within the financial system. A holistic approach — not just monetary, but fiscal and structural — is the need of the hour to steer the economy toward a sustained recovery.
