For Swati Dhingra, the 3.75% rate cut is a moment of professional vindication. The external MPC member has been voting for cuts for months, often alone. She argued that the Bank was crushing the economy unnecessarily. Now, with GDP shrinking and the majority joining her side, her analysis has become the mainstream view.
Dhingra’s focus has always been on the “lag effects” and the damage to the supply side. She warned that by the time the data showed a recession, it would be too late. The 0.1% contraction proved her right. The economy stalled exactly as she predicted.
Her influence on the committee has grown. She represents the “real economy” view—focusing on consumption, trade, and business survival rather than just abstract inflation targets. Her alliance with the new members shifted the balance of power away from the traditional hawks.
However, victory is fleeting. If the rate cut triggers a new wave of inflation, Dhingra’s dovishness will be blamed. But for now, she is the intellectual architect of the pivot. She convinced the Governor that the risk of doing nothing was greater than the risk of cutting.
In 2026, Dhingra will likely push for further, faster cuts. She believes the “neutral rate” is lower than the hawks think. The battle for the next cut begins now, and Dhingra is leading the charge.