Question map
With reference to inflation in India, which of the following statements is correct?
Explanation
The prime objective of any measure to check inflation is to reduce the flow of money supply in the economy or reduce the liquidity in the market.[1] When money circulation decreases, there is less purchasing power in the economy, which helps moderate demand-pull inflation and brings prices under control.
Option A is incorrect because under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (as amended in 2016), RBI is entrusted with the responsibility of conducting monetary policy in India with the primary objective of maintaining price stability[2], and the combined impact of the Reserve Bank of India's calibrated monetary policy and the Government of India's focused interventions help ease supply-side constraints and stabilise prices[3]. This shows inflation control is a shared responsibility.
Option B is incorrect because one of the main goals of monetary policy in India is the control of inflation and the role of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in this process is rather important.[4] The RBI increases the repo rate to control inflation, which[5] reduces the amount of money in circulation, cooling down the economy and curbing inflation.[5]
Option D is incorrect as increased money circulation actually fuels inflation rather than controlling it.
Sources- [1] Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > MEASURES TO CHECK INFLATION > p. 71
- [2] https://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap157_i.pdf
- [3] https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/apr/doc2025416540901.pdf
PROVENANCE & STUDY PATTERN
Guest previewThis is a 'Sitter'—a fundamental concept question that defines your entry into the serious aspirant league. It tests basic macroeconomic literacy (Quantity Theory of Money) and institutional awareness (RBI vs. Govt roles). If you get this wrong, you are likely failing the exam due to weak basics, not lack of current affairs.
This question can be broken into the following sub-statements. Tap a statement sentence to jump into its detailed analysis.
- Statement 1: Is controlling inflation in India solely the responsibility of the Government of India?
- Statement 2: Does the Reserve Bank of India have no role in controlling inflation in India?
- Statement 3: Does a decrease in money circulation (reduced money supply) help to control inflation in India?
- Statement 4: Does an increase in money circulation (expanded money supply) help to control inflation in India?
- Explicitly assigns responsibility for conducting monetary policy—and maintaining price stability—to the Reserve Bank of India, indicating a non-governmental actor has primary inflation-related duties.
- Shows inflation control is a statutory central-bank responsibility, so it is not solely the Government of India’s task.
- Describes inflation moderation as the "combined impact" of the RBI’s monetary policy and Government interventions, directly attributing roles to both institutions.
- Supports the view that inflation control is shared between the RBI and the Government, not solely the Government.
- Lists specific administrative, fiscal and trade measures undertaken by the Government to control inflation, showing the Government’s role but not exclusivity.
- Implies a complementary role to the RBI by describing government actions to mitigate inflationary impact.
Lists three categories of measures to control inflation: fiscal, monetary and administrative — implying multiple actors/instruments.
A student can note fiscal = government, monetary = central bank (RBI), administrative = regulatory/other agencies, so control likely shared.
Explicitly describes fiscal measures and states 'The Government uses fiscal measures... Under fiscal policy, the government (not RBI) controls inflation'.
Combine this with knowledge that fiscal policy is only one of several measure types to infer government is a major but not sole actor.
Says the GOI sets the inflation target in consultation with the RBI and constituted the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to determine policy (repo) rate.
Use this to infer that GOI and RBI share institutional roles: GOI sets target while RBI/MPC implements monetary policy to meet it.
States the RBI (via MPC) was entrusted with inflation targeting and is responsible for containing annual inflation within a range; RBI is answerable to GOI if it misses the range.
A student could combine this with the idea that operational responsibility lies with RBI whereas GOI has target-setting and oversight roles.
Provides examples of GOI administrative actions (e.g., enforcement against hoarding, Essential Commodities Act) to control food inflation.
Shows the government has specific administrative levers for certain inflation sources, suggesting shared responsibilities depending on cause.
- Lists RBI's monetary policy instruments (e.g., Repo Rate, SDF), which are used to implement monetary policy and influence inflation.
- Explicitly describes tools the RBI uses to manage liquidity and interest rates — mechanisms through which inflation is controlled.
- States that control of inflation is one of the main goals of monetary policy in India.
- Explicitly says the role of the RBI in controlling inflation is important, directly contradicting the claim that it has no role.
- States the Reserve Bank's mandate includes 'securing monetary stability in India' and operating the currency and credit system — functions tied to inflation control.
- Notes the RBI's function of conducting monetary policy, which is the primary institutional channel for influencing inflation.
States the RBI Act provides for an inflation target set by the government in consultation with the RBI and that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) determines the policy (repo) rate required to achieve the inflation target.
A student can link 'MPC sets repo rate to achieve target' to the basic fact that interest‑rate changes affect borrowing and money demand, hence inflation expectations and price levels.
Defines central bank functions including controlling money supply through instruments like bank rate, open market operations and reserve ratios.
Combine this with the standard macro rule that money supply influences inflation to infer that RBI tools can be used to affect inflation.
Explicitly says the RBI controls the money supply and uses quantitative and qualitative tools to do so, and acts as lender of last resort to banks.
A student can connect these tools (e.g., changing reserve requirements, open market operations) to how liquidity alterations can curb or fuel inflation.
Explains that monetary measures are a main category for checking inflation and that the prime objective is to reduce money flow or liquidity in the market.
Using the rule that monetary measures reduce liquidity, a student can infer that the institution controlling monetary instruments (RBI) is relevant to controlling inflation.
Notes RBI publishes a Monetary Policy Report to explain sources and forecasts of inflation for the coming period, implying an ongoing analytic and policy role vis‑à‑vis inflation.
A student could view regular forecasting and public policy communication as evidence of an operational role in managing and responding to inflation dynamics.
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- Explicitly states the prime objective of measures to check inflation is to reduce the flow of money supply / liquidity in the market.
- Places reducing money supply/liquidity as central to monetary (and fiscal/administrative) anti-inflation measures.
- Describes RBI's use of open market operations (selling government securities) to reduce the domestic monetary base / money supply to ease inflation.
- Links specific central-bank instruments (sterilisation, OMO) to the goal of reducing money supply to counter inflationary pressures.
- Defines deflation as a general decline in prices often caused by a reduction in the supply of money, implying lower money supply reduces price levels.
- Explains economic transmission: reduced money supply can lower demand and prices, illustrating the mechanism by which inflation can be checked (or overshoot to deflation).
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- States that when savings are put into banks and mutual funds the money goes into circulation and total effective money supply rises.
- Explicitly links increased money in circulation to inflationary pressures, implying expansion of money supply does not control inflation.
- Describes adoption of monetary targeting with the objective of controlling inflation by limiting monetary expansion.
- Implies that reducing or limiting growth in money supply is a policy tool to contain inflation in India.
- Explains RBI policy: to control inflation the RBI increases the repo rate which reduces the amount of money in circulation.
- Shows policy logic that reducing money circulation (not increasing it) cools the economy and curbs inflation.
States that RBI increases money supply relative to expected nominal GDP and that inflation depends on the proportion between money supply and output.
A student could compare recent nominal GDP growth and RBI's money supply growth rates to judge whether money growth likely fuels inflation or matches output expansion.
Explains that measures to check inflation primarily aim to reduce the flow of money supply or liquidity in the market.
Use this rule to infer that increasing money supply would work against these anti-inflation measures and thus is unlikely to control inflation.
Gives an example (capital inflows and MSS) showing that increased money supply without matching production leads to 'too much money chasing too few goods', causing inflation.
Apply this example to India by checking if money supply increases occurred without corresponding output increases, which would suggest rising inflation rather than control.
Notes that monetization of deficit (printing money) increases aggregate demand and 'increases inflation due to increased money supply'.
Examine episodes of deficit financing in India and subsequent inflation outcomes to test whether expanding money supply controlled or raised inflation.
Describes RBI tools (reserve requirements, open market operations) by which money supply is directly controlled, implying a causal policy link between money supply and inflation control.
A student could review when RBI tightened vs eased these tools and correlate those periods with inflation trends to infer the effect of money supply changes.
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- [THE VERDICT]: Sitter. Direct from NCERT Class XII Macroeconomics (Chapter 3) or any standard economy primer (Vivek Singh/Singhania).
- [THE CONCEPTUAL TRIGGER]: The 'Transmission Mechanism' of Monetary Policy. How does changing the Repo rate actually affect the price of onions?
- [THE HORIZONTAL EXPANSION]: Memorize the Inflation Targeting Framework (4% +/- 2%, set by Govt, maintained by RBI); Composition of MPC (3 RBI + 3 Govt nominees); Difference between Headline (CPI-C) and Core Inflation; and the Urjit Patel Committee recommendations.
- [THE STRATEGIC METACOGNITION]: Do not just memorize 'RBI fights inflation'. Visualize the flow: RBI sucks liquidity $\rightarrow$ Money becomes scarce $\rightarrow$ Interest rates rise $\rightarrow$ Consumption drops $\rightarrow$ Prices cool down.
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References classify inflation-control tools into fiscal, monetary and administrative measures, showing multiple instruments and actors are involved rather than a single authority.
High-yield for UPSC because questions often ask which policy (fiscal/monetary/administrative) or which institution is responsible for inflation control. Mastering this helps answer policy-role and policy-effect questions, and to analyse trade-offs. Preparation: learn definitions, mechanisms (how taxes/spending affect demand; how liquidity management works) and example measures.
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > MEASURES TO CHECK INFLATION > p. 71
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > A. Fiscal Measures > p. 72
Evidence shows inflation targets are set by the Government in consultation with the RBI and that the Monetary Policy Committee (RBI) sets policy rates—indicating shared responsibilities and an institutional arrangement.
Crucial for UPSC since institutional roles (RBI vs GOI, MPC, statutory framework) are frequently tested in polity-economy overlap questions. Understand the framework agreement, role of MPC, and accountability mechanisms. Preparation: focus on RBI Act amendments, target-setting process and operational tools (repo rate), and implications for central bank independence.
- Indian Economy, Vivek Singh (7th ed. 2023-24) > Chapter 2: Money and Banking- Part I > 2.13 Monetary Policy > p. 60
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > Numerical Target of CPI-Based Inflation > p. 73
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 7: Money and Banking > MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEE > p. 172
References link government deficit financing (including RBI financing/monetisation) to increased money supply and higher inflation, showing how GOI fiscal choices interact with monetary control.
Important for UPSC because questions probe fiscal-monetary interactions and macroeconomic stability. Mastering this explains why both GOI and RBI actions matter for inflation and informs answers on risks of monetisation. Preparation: study mechanics of deficit financing, monetisation, and their inflationary and macroeconomic effects.
- Indian Economy, Vivek Singh (7th ed. 2023-24) > Chapter 4: Government Budgeting > Impact of "Monetization of Deficit" > p. 165
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > A. Fiscal Measures > p. 72
The references state that inflation targeting is the framework for policy and that the MPC (constituted by the Government) determines the policy/repo rate to achieve the target.
High-yield for UPSC: questions often ask who sets inflation targets, how policy rates are determined, and the institutional roles (Govt vs RBI/MPC). Understanding this clarifies responsibility-sharing and accountability (e.g., reporting when targets miss). Study the RBI Act provisions, MPC remit, and practical implications for rate-setting.
- Indian Economy, Vivek Singh (7th ed. 2023-24) > Chapter 2: Money and Banking- Part I > 2.13 Monetary Policy > p. 60
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > The Committee (in its report in 2014) recommended for focusing on only one objective, i.e. INFLATION TARGETING. > p. 73
Sources describe the RBI as the central bank that controls money supply via instruments (bank rate, OMO, reserve ratios) and that reducing money flow/liquidity is a monetary measure to check inflation.
Essential concept: many UPSC questions tie inflation outcomes to central bank actions (quantitative/qualitative tools). Master this to answer questions on transmission, instrument choice, and policy trade-offs. Focus on the tools, their mechanism, and effects on liquidity and inflation.
- Macroeconomics (NCERT class XII 2025 ed.) > Chapter 3: Money and Banking > Central bank > p. 38
- Macroeconomics (NCERT class XII 2025 ed.) > Chapter 3: Money and Banking > 3.4 POLICY TOOLS TO CONTROL MONEY SUPPLY > p. 42
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > MEASURES TO CHECK INFLATION > p. 71
The RBI publishes the MPR explaining sources and forecasts of inflation for the medium term, indicating an active analytical and forecasting role in inflation management.
Important for answering contemporary and analytical questions: shows how RBI communicates, justifies policy, and frames expectations. Aspirants should review MPR structure, regularity, and how forecasts guide policy decisions.
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 7: Money and Banking > MONETARY POLICY REPORT AND FINANCIAL STABILITY REPORT > p. 173
References state the prime objective of anti-inflation measures is to reduce money supply/liquidity to control inflation.
High-yield topic for UPSC economics: explains the broad policy approach to inflation control and is often tested in questions on monetary policy and macroeconomic management. Connects to fiscal policy, RBI objectives, and inflation-control case studies; prepare by linking theory (how money supply affects aggregate demand) with RBI policy examples.
- Indian Economy, Nitin Singhania .(ed 2nd 2021-22) > Chapter 4: Inflation > MEASURES TO CHECK INFLATION > p. 71
- Indian Economy, Vivek Singh (7th ed. 2023-24) > Chapter 2: Money and Banking- Part I > The following are the major instruments/tools that RBI uses for conducting its monetary policy: > p. 64
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The 'Next Logical Question' is on the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voting mechanics. While the Govt sets the target (Section 45ZA), the RBI Governor has the 'casting vote' in a tie. Also, look out for 'Sterilization'—the specific act of RBI mopping up excess foreign capital to prevent domestic inflation.
Use the 'Extreme Absolutism' hack. Option [A] says 'Government... ONLY' and Option [B] says 'RBI has NO role'. In a complex mixed economy like India, no major variable is controlled by a single entity exclusively. Eliminate [A] and [B] instantly. Between [C] and [D], apply basic supply-demand logic: Less money chasing goods = lower prices.
Link this to GS-3 (Inclusive Growth). Inflation is often called a 'Regressive Tax' because it hits the poor hardest. However, aggressive inflation control (tight money) can choke credit to MSMEs, hurting employment. This is the 'Growth-Inflation Trade-off' you must discuss in Mains.
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