RBI projects retail inflation in 5-5.2% range for H1 FY22

Reserve Bank of India

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Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) projected Friday retail inflation to be in 5-5.2 per cent range during the first half of the next fiscal year, expecting further softening of vegetables prices in near term. RBI also has lowered the retail inflation forecast for the current January-March quarter of 2020-21 fiscal at 5.2 per cent.

The RBIhas kept the key policy rate unchanged at four per cent, with an accommodative stance, so as to ensure that inflation remains well within the target, Governor Shaktikanta Das said while announcing the last monetary policy of 2020-21.

The MPC (monetary policy committee) voted unanimously to leave the policy repo rate unchanged at 4 per cent. It also unanimously decided to continue with the accommodative stance of monetary policy as long as necessary while ensuring that inflation remains within the target going forward,” Das said.

The governor said the outlook on growth has improved significantly and inflation has returned within the tolerance band (of +/-4 per cent).

Having breached the upper tolerance threshold (over 6 per cent) continuously since June last year, CPI inflation has come below six per cent in December for the first time in the post-lockdown period supported by favourable base effects and sharp fall in key vegetable prices, Das said in his statement.

Vegetables, he said, accounted for around 90 per cent of the decline in headline inflation during November and December.

Acknowledging that price pressures may continue to persist in certain key food items, the RBI expects vegetable prices to remain soft in the near term due to higher fresh arrivals, active supply side interventions as well as concerted policy actions by both the central and state governments among others.

Das pointed out that petroleum prices have reached historic highs due to surge in international crude oil rates and high indirect taxes, both by the Centre and states. He said said it was critical to ensure that the ongoing cost build-up does not escalate further.

“Taking into consideration all these factors, the projection for CPI inflation has been revised to 5.2 per cent for Q4:2020-21, 5.2 per cent to 5.0 per cent in H1:2021-22 and 4.3 per cent for Q3:2021-22, with risks broadly balanced,” Das informed.

Going ahead, factors that could shape the food inflation trajectory in coming months including likely bumper kharif (summer) harvest arrivals in markets, rising prospects of a good rabi crop (winter crop), larger winter supplies of key vegetables and softer poultry demand on fears of avian flu are all indicative of a stable near-term outlook, the governor said. By March 2021, the government would be reviewing the inflation target for the next five years, he said.

 

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