The Reserve Bank of India should keep its key rates high not just to fight inflation but also to prevent the asset bubbles formation, a top economist from Standard Chartered said on Wednesday.
"I think the RBI needs to make sure that the monetary policy is tight not just to address the immediate inflation challenge but (also) to prevent bubbles and inflation problems being seen in the future," the bank's chief economist and group head of Global Research, Gerard Lyons, told reporters in Mumbai.
Lyons also alluded to the days leading up to the asset bubble burst in US, and the subsequent financial slowdown, saying that "(Alan) Greenspan in the US, you could argue, kept policy too low for too long."
With a view to tame the inflation -- 8.66 per cent in April -- the RBI has increased its key rates eight consecutive times over the past 12 months, the last being the higher-than-expected 50 bps hike on May 3.
RBI has also taken measures to curb any possibility of asset-bubbles formation through a string of measures such as increasing the provision coverage ratio on teaser loans which involve staggered interest payments, among others.
"RBI and other authorities here in India are right to use macroprudential measures for trying to curb property bubbles," Lyons said, speaking after the launch of its report -- India in the Super-Cycle.
The report says India will be a key player in the ongoing supercycle -- a period of sustained growth lasting over a generation --