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flag India’s central bank may inject ₹1.5–2 lakh crore more liquidity to lower deposit rates after rate cuts.

flag The Reserve Bank of India may need to inject an additional 1.5 to 2 lakh crore in durable liquidity to ensure its recent rate cuts effectively lower deposit rates, economists and bank officials say. flag Despite a 1.45 lakh crore injection, liquidity remains under pressure due to expected tax payments and foreign exchange interventions, with levels falling to about 0.8% of NDTL—below the 1% target needed for proper policy transmission. flag Deposit rates have dropped 92 basis points since February, but lending rates have fallen less, and further cuts depend on market conditions and liquidity.

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