India’s retail inflation eases in July, govt vows to take steps

NEW DELHI : Indian retail inflation eased in July after holding above 6per cent for two months in a row, helped by improving supplies following the lifting of pandemic restrictions, and the government said it would take all necessary steps to contain rising prices.

Consumer prices rose 5.59per cent in July from the same month last year, lower than June’s 6.26per cent annual inflation rate and below a Reuters poll forecast of 5.78per cent, data released by Ministry of Statistics showed on Thursday.

Food prices, which account for nearly half of the inflation basket, rose 3.96per cent year-on-year in July from 5.15per cent a month before.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) held its repo rate at a record low last week, but it raised its inflation forecast amid signs that policymakers could be edging closer to tapering pandemic-induced stimulus.

But allaying these fears, Nirmala Sitharaman, India’s finance minister, told industrialists on Thursday that the economy had not so far reached the level where financial liquidity support could be withdrawn by the central bank.

Some economists said Thursday’s July inflation print was within the range of the central bank’s 2per cent-6per cent target and that price pressures appeared to be easing.

“Today’s print provides some breather to policymakers with inflation falling back within the target band,” said Garima Kapoor, an economist for institutional equities at Elara Capital.

However, she said, the expected trajectory of inflation was likely to compel the central bank to normalise policy towards the end of the fiscal year.

Inflation has heated up this year as many companies passed on rises in their input costs like steel, cement and fuel to consumers amid a pickup in overseas demand.

Retail fuel and electricity prices rose 12.38per cent in July while transport costs climbed 10.54per cent from a year ago, the data showed. However, the prices of cereals, vegetables and sugar fell in July.

The latest inflation figures come amid a fall in COVID-19 infections, and a pickup in the pace of vaccinations in the country, although many policymakers are still worried about the possibility of a third wave of the pandemic.

Core inflation, excluding volatile food and fuel costs, was estimated at between 5.94per cent and 6.1per cent, according to three economists, compared with 6.1per cent to 6.2per cent in June.

The Indian government does not release core inflation numbers.

(Reporting by Manoj Kumar and Aftab Ahmed; Additonal reporting by Rama Venkat in BENGALURU; Editing by Jason Neely and Hugh Lawson)

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