The Free Press Journal

Retail inflation falls to 18-month low of 2.19%

Dec WPI eases to eight-month low of 3.80% on fall in food, fuel prices

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Retail inflation declined to an 18-month low of 2.19 per cent in December 2018 from a year earlier, helped by a fall in food prices and smaller increases in fuel costs, according to the data released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementa­tion.

Drastic fall in inflation data creates headroom for the RBI to cut interest rate in its monetary policy review next month.

Another set of official data showed that the wholesale inflation too eased to an eightmonth low of 3.80 per cent in December on softening fuel and food prices.

The inflation based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) was 2.33 per cent in November and 5.21 per cent in December 2017.

According to the ministry data, food inflation remained in the negative zone at 2.51 per cent compared to (-) 2.61 per cent in November.

The rate of price rise in vegetables, fruits and proteinric­h eggs continued to decline.

However, there was a marginal increase in the prices of meat, fish, and pulses.

Fuel and light inflation was 4.54 per cent in December, down from 7.39 per cent in November on back of reduction in prices of petrol and diesel. The RBI, which mainly factors in retail inflation, has been tasked by the government to maintain the inflation near 4 per cent.

The central bank, under new Governor Shaktikant­a Das, is scheduled to announce the next set its bimonthly monetary policy on February 7 and industry expects that it will cut the key lending rate.

Commenting on the data, industry chamber CII said the decline in the inflation reading, which is well within the central bank's mediumterm inflation target, should induce the RBI to resume the accommodat­ive policy stance to trigger the investment cycle and support growth by lowering the borrowing costs of industry.

The factory output based on movement in Index of Industrial Production (IIP) slumped to a 17-month low of 0.5 per cent in November on account of contractio­n in the manufactur­ing sector, particular­ly consumer and capital goods.

Another industry body Assocham also made a case for easing of policy stance by the RBI. In its December monetary policy review, the RBI had kept interest rates unchanged but held out a promise to cut them if the upside risks to the inflation do not materialis­e. Having raised rates twice this year, the central bank had retained its 'calibrated tightening' policy stance.

Shubhada Rao, Chief Economist, Yes Bank expects that going forward the inflation is expected to be closer to 3.5- 3.7

per cent band.

"This paves way for the MPC to not just change its stance to neutral but also mull over a possible rate cut. The inflation trajectory looks below 4 per cent over the next quarter," he said.

Wholesale inflation continued to decline for the second consecutiv­e month in December due to cheaper fuel and vegetables. The Wholesale Price Index-based inflation was 4.64 per cent in November 2018 and 5.54 per cent in October.

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