Business Standard

WPI inflation eases to 0.16% in Oct, lowest in 40 months

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Wholesale inflation in October crashed to a 40-month low of 0.16 per cent, down from 0.3 per cent rise in September.

The previous low was in June 2016, when inflation was negative 0.1 per cent. Deflationa­ry pressure on manufactur­ed product prices, for a 12th straight month, has continued to pull down the Wholesale Price Index- (Wpi)-based inflation.

In line with the trend, prices of manufactur­ed products, which have a combined weight of 65 per cent in the index, contracted at a faster clip. Contractio­n stood at 0.84 per cent in the latest month, against a fall of 0.42 per cent in September. Inflation of manufactur­ed food products, however, rose to 3.7 per cent from 3.1 per cent.

“Inflation in manufactur­ing is at its lowest level since April 2016. The WPI in manufactur­ed goods was 4.6 per cent in the correspond­ing month a year ago. The contractio­nary pattern recorded in the previous two months indicates the lack of purchasing power of manufactur­ers. Inflation in this component has seen a decline on a sustained basis since October 2018,” Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at CARE Ratings, said.

Nine of the 17 components within the manufactur­ed products have recorded a contractio­n in the latest month. Experts say the index would continue to see low growth due to the poor health of the manufactur­ing sector, despite a quick uptick in global commodity prices and food inflation.

The official data released on Thursday showed wholesale inflation, mainly pushed by food inflation, rose to 9.8 per cent in October, from 7.4 per cent in September. Pressure points remained in food category with cereal prices rising by 8.32 per cent in October, up from 6.24 per cent.

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