The signal for a rate reduction has been flashed. Though the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is yet to spell out its plans, finance minister P Chidambaram is keen that interest rates should come down in order to “stimulate investment and consumption” in the economy. Most bankers agree that a reduction is on the anvil. While nobody expects the rates to come down immediately, it is inevitable in one or two months.The conditions are, indeed, conducive for a rate reduction. As indicated recently by Canara Bank chairman M B N Rao, inflation is at a five-year low, interest rates are falling globally and banks have surplus liquidity.The US Federal Reserve Board has cut interest rates thrice in the last three months. “The US is on the precipice of its first consumer recession since 1991, which was the last time the market suffered from a confluence of high energy prices, weakening employment conditions, real estate deflation and tightening credit,” explained Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg. He opined that the Fed would need to cut interest rates to 2 per cent by mid-2009 to sustain the recovery.