India’s retail inflation
inched lower to 7.01% in June, from May’s 7.04%, but stayed stuck above the 7%
mark for the third straight month. Price gains also exceeded the RBI’s upper
tolerance limit of 6% for the sixth month. Rural inflation edged up to 7.09%,
from 7.08% in May, while urban consumers faced a 6.92% price rise, as per the
Consumer Price Index. Food price inflation, as per the Consumer Food Price
Index, eased to 7.75%, from 7.97%, but remained above 8% in urban areas, at
8.04%. Higher costs for cereals, and vegetables such as tomatoes, as well as
milk and meat, clothing and footwear and services, were balanced out by slower
price gains in edible oils and fuel, following excise and import duty cuts.
Finance Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman emphasised the need to keep a constant vigil on prices and sustain
growth impulses. The central bank and the government will have to be extremely
mindful and watchful of price movements The Minister expressed the hope that
the monsoon would be favourable for the farm sector and result in a good crop,
adding that it would also help ensure rural demand remained intact.
There is not much relief
for the low-income consumer budgets with inflation in clothing and footwear at
higher levels of 9.2% and 11.9%, respectively, in June. Fuel and light
inflation also increased to 10.4% in June as compared to 9.5% in May.
Inflationary pressures thus continue unabated due to global supply-side
disruptions and consequent pressures on prices of global crude and primary
products. The central bank is expected to continue to raise interest rates by
about 50 to 60 basis points.
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