India's retail inflation shows tad up in Oct due to high fuel cost
text_fieldsNew Delhi: India's retail inflation witnessed an upward trend in October after remaining downtrend for four months due to the high fuel cost leading to food prices rise.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) based on inflation was 4.35% in September and 7.61% in October 2020. The annual inflation had declined to 6.26% in June from 6.3% in May. Later it further eased to 5.59% in July, 5.3% in August and 4.35% in September.
According to the data by the National Statistical Office (NSO), 'oils and fats' prices zoomed 33.5% while inflation in the fuel and light category rose to 13.63% in October 2021. Inflation in the food basket was 0.85% in October, marginally up from 0.67% in September. Fruit prices increased by 4.92% while vegetable prices dropped by 19.43% and that of eggs declined by 1.38%.
Rating firm ICRA said the uptick in the CPI inflation in October 2021 relative to the previous month, while mild, was pretty broad-based. Hardening in inflation for clothing and footwear, and miscellaneous items suggest that reviving demand is nudging producers in some sectors to pass through the input price pressures, resulting in a pickup in the core inflation to 5.8% in that month, it said.
Aditi Nayar, Chief Economist, ICRA said, "The MPC is likely to change the monetary policy stance to neutral only after there is additional evidence that the domestic demand revival has become durable, which is likely in the February 2022 review. We expect this to be accompanied by a 15 bps hike in the reverse repo rate by the RBI."
Despite base effect, still-high fuel costs, input cost pressures and seasonal turn in some food prices in coming months could even see inflation rising towards 6.2% plus later in the fiscal year, Madhavi Arora, Lead Economist, Emkay Global Financial Services said.
Vegetable prices warrant monitoring given the increase in real-time data this month too. While the direct impact of the fuel price cut will be visible from November, its indirect impact in the context of pressure on producer margins, services inflation and the trajectory of oil and other commodity prices will also be important, Sreejith Balasubramanian, Economist Fund Management, IDFC AMC said.
The government has mandated the Reserve Bank to maintain retail inflation at 4% with a margin of 2% on either side.
The next monetary policy of the Reserve Bank is due next month. The Reserve Bank, which mainly factors in CPI-based inflation while arriving at its bi-monthly monetary policy, has been tasked by the government to keep it at 4%, with a tolerance band of 2% on either side.
The RBI has projected the CPI inflation at 5.3% for 2021-22: 5.1% in the second quarter, 4.5% in third; 5.8% in the last quarter of the fiscal, with risks broadly balanced. The retail inflation during the April-June period of 2022-23 is projected at 5.2%.
PTI inputs