India has had double-digit inflation episodes inside living memory.
So the question of whether 4% inflation is the right target carries real weight. The RBI just answered it.
The answer is yes. And don't expect it to change for a while.
Gupta Backs 4% As The Right Level
Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Poonam Gupta laid out the case on Tuesday. She spoke at a seminar on inflation targeting hosted by NCAER.
She said three things all point the same way. Those are domestic experience, stakeholder feedback, and global comparisons.
All three say 4% is the right target for India's level of income, size, and complexity. Gupta added that India's inflation has not behaved like an outlier compared with other emerging markets that target similar levels.
The next review of the framework is set for 2031. Gupta said any change at that point would only happen if external shocks fade and the Indian economy starts growing at a much faster pace.
How The Framework Works
India adopted formal inflation targeting in 2016. The change came after the country amended the RBI Act.
The Monetary Policy Committee was set up at the same time. The committee got a single goal: keep headline consumer price inflation at 4%.
The target comes with a 2 percentage point tolerance band on either side. That gives the RBI a 2 to 6% range to work inside.
If inflation runs outside that band, the RBI has to formally explain the miss to the government.
The framework was reviewed in 2021 with no change. It was reviewed again on March 25, 2026, with the same result.
Stakeholder Feedback On The Review
The RBI ran a public consultation as part of the latest review. Of about 75 responses, more than 90% backed keeping the 4% target.
Only two respondents suggested a lower 3.5% level. There was also strong support for keeping headline CPI as the target measure.
The other choice would have been core inflation, which strips out food and fuel. Gupta noted that 47 to 48 countries target headline inflation worldwide.
Only one targets core. The same 90% level supported keeping the 2 to 6% band.
The band held up during the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war.
What To Watch
Gupta said the RBI is working on more transparency. That includes publishing more core inflation data and expanding research output.
The next big test is whether India can hit the target through 2031. The risk is another external shock that pushes inflation out of the band.
Gupta also said India is now growing in a 5.8% to 8% range. That is a tighter band than the country saw in past cycles.
Lower inflation and steadier growth give the RBI more room to cut rates if it needs to. That makes the 4% target easier to defend.
For investors in Indian assets, the takeaway is simple. The rate-setting rules they have lived with since 2016 stay in place for another five years.
That kind of policy continuity is rare in emerging markets. It also tends to draw foreign capital, which the rupee and Indian bonds both need.
