The Reserve Bank of India is set to raise interest rates again next week with a slim majority of economists in a Reuters poll expecting a half-point hike and some others expecting a smaller 35 basis point rise.

There was a wide consensus that the RBI will raise rates at the September 30 meeting, although there were differences over how far it would go with inflation accelerating to seven per cent and with the rupee weakening.

The RBI has lagged many of its global peers, despite inflation sticking above the top end of its target range of 2-6 per cent all year. It has raised rates in three separate moves since May, one of them unscheduled, totalling 140 basis points and taking the key repo rate to 5.40 per cent.

In the latest Reuters poll, economists were split five ways on what the RBI will do at its next meeting.

Slightly over half, 26 of 51, said the RBI would go for a 50 basis point hike, taking the repo rate to 5.90 per cent. Another 20 predicted a 35 basis points increase. The remaining five respondents pencilled in more modest increases, ranging from 20 to 30 basis points.

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While many revised their forecasts up from an August poll, and no one expected the RBI to leave rates unchanged this time, there were no immediate explanations on why the central bank would opt for a smaller move right now given most of its peers are going big.

The US Federal Reserve just delivered its third straight 75 basis point hike and has shown no signs of slowing down, sending the dollar index to a new two-decade high and more downward pressure on the rupee.

"In India's case, bulging twin deficits - current account and fiscal - in the wake of a stronger dollar are likely to place a greater premium on macro stability, despite the visible scarring from the pandemic," said Sajjid Chinoy, chief India economist at J.P. Morgan.

"But a food price surge in recent weeks and a hawkish Fed will induce the RBI to move 50 bps, instead of 35 bps, at the September meeting, and be forced to act again in December, taking the terminal rate closer to 6.25 per cent, 50 bps higher than the global-recession outcome that we had envisaged."

However, the poll showed the RBI taking a softer approach with rates, with no clear majority on where it will stop hiking but with median forecasts showing the repo rate at 6.00 per cent in each quarter through end-2023.

Meanwhile, the rupee, down nearly nine per cent this year, hit an all-time low of 80.86/dollar on Wednesday, lower than analysts had predicted in a separate Reuters poll.

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A weaker currency is likely to make imports more expensive and keep inflation elevated for longer.

The survey also showed inflation staying above the top of the RBI's tolerance range until the first quarter of 2023.

Despite GDP growing 13.5 per cent last quarter on a year ago, which made India the world's fastest-growing major economy, the pace of expansion was forecast to halve this quarter to 6.2 per cent and further slow to 4.4 per cent in the following two quarters.

That may be one reason why the RBI is not following the same pace as other major central banks.

Over 60 per cent of analysts, 23 of 38 who answered an additional question, said a slowdown in economic growth would play a larger than normal role in the RBI's deliberations on interest rates by the end of this fiscal year.

Economists expected growth to average 6.2 per cent and 6.5 per cent over the next two years, the poll showed.

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