Interest rates on small savings schemes likely to be increased for the third quarter (Q3) in a row in April-June 2023 as the central government on Friday will be revising the interest rates. 


The rates were left unchanged for nine straight quarters. The last six months have seen the interest rates being raised by 30-140 basis points. One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.


Small savings interest rates are linked to market yields on government securities at a spread of 0-100 basis points over the yield of these securities of comparable maturities. As such, with market yields on government securities rising during the reference period, interest rates on small savings schemes should also rise.


In December 2022-February 2023, which is the reference period for small savings interest rates for April-June 2023, yield on five-year government bonds rose by around 30 basis points, while 10-year bond yields rose by just under 20 basis points. However, the government has not always altered these interest rates as dictated by the agreed formula, with the classic example being the nine quarters ended July-September 2022.


Government bond yields had crashed following the onset of the pandemic in early 2020 as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) infused extraordinary amounts of liquidity to ensure financial stability. While this should have resulted in a decline in small savings interest rates, the government left them untouched for nine quarters.


Any increase that the government announces in small savings interest rates for the next quarter would be on top of an increase of 10-30 basis points announced for October-December 2022 and 20-110 basis points for January-March 2023.


After the rates were increased for January-March 2023, the RBI stated in the February edition of their State of the Economy article that interest rates on post office term deposits of up to three years "are now closely aligned with formula-based rates".


In January, the RBI had pointed out that the increase in small savings interest rates "may pose competition to banks for raising deposits, and banks may be prompted to further increase their retail deposit rates".