New Delhi: Subdued prices of food items like vegetables pulled down retail inflation for the third month in a row to 5.3 per cent in August. The retail inflation is within the RBI’s comfort zone. While the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based retail inflation declined to 5.3 per cent in August from 6.69 per cent in the same month a year ago, food inflation dipped at a much faster pace to 3.11 per cent from 9.05 per cent in August 2020. The food inflation was also lower than 3.96 per cent in preceding month of July.
Retail inflation, which rose sharply to 6.3 per cent in May from 4.23 per cent in April, has been on a downward trajectory since then. It was 6.26 per cent in June and 5.59 per cent in July this year.
The Reserve Bank mainly takes into account retail inflation to decide the monetary policy every two months. It has been tasked by the Centre to keep retail inflation at four per cent, with a tolerance band of twp per cent on either side.
As per the data released Monday by the National Statistical Office (NSO), inflation in ‘vegetables’ and ‘cereals and products’ contracted by 11.68 per cent and 1.42 per cent respectively.
However, the rate of price rise was 33 per cent in the ‘oils and fats’ segment in August 2021 over the year-ago month.
In order to control rising edible oil prices during the festival season, the government recently slashed the base custom duties on palm, soyabean and sunflower oils. The move, industry said, could bring down retail prices by Rs 4-5 per litre.
‘Fuel and light’ continued to be pocket heavy for consumers with an inflation print of 12.95 per cent last month.
Radhika Rao, Economist and Senior Vice-President, DBS Singapore, said inflation decelerated on the back of favourable base effects and moderate food price pressures, as most sub-segments trended down, barring oil and fats.
“The inflation tailwind will allow the central bank to remain accommodative at the October policy review, with a bigger focus on liquidity management via absorption measures,” Rao said.
The Reserve Bank had kept the key interest rate unchanged in its monetary policy review in August.
Upasna Bhardwaj, Senior Economist at Kotak Mahindra Bank, expects the subsequent readings to remain fairly benign and much lower than RBI estimates. “The softer inflation would provide relief to the policymakers and more room to move much slower in terms of policy normalization,” she said.
The RBI has projected the CPI inflation at 5.7 per cent during 2021-22 – 5.9 per cent in the second quarter, 5.3 per cent in third, and 5.8 per cent in the fourth quarter of the fiscal, with risks broadly balanced. CPI inflation for Q1 2022-23 is projected at 5.1 per cent.