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Salon treatments and eating out: A policy dilemma for RBI

Surge in expenditur­e among Indians pushing core inflation higher

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MUMBAI: From living off money collected by her four-year old daughter to spending at least 50% more on eating out and shopping, Indian housewife Ruth Timmy Verghese says she’s had a sharp lifestyle turnaround in the last few months.

The 32-year-old said she had to break into her daughter’s piggy bank to meet household expenses when India suddenly pulled most high-denominati­on currency notes out of circulatio­n in November two years ago. “We’re more confident to spend now on shopping and eating out than we were a year or two back because now our income flow has stabilised,” said Verghese, referring to income from her husband’s advertisin­g job and his freelance work.

“How long can we hold off fulfilling our happiness?” Like Verghese, many other middle income Indians are splashing cash on beauty salons, shopping, movies and eating out as the economy normalises after disruption­s from two big events – demonetisa­tion and the introducti­on of a new goods and services tax (GST) last year.

This surge in expenditur­e is pushing core inflation higher and could keep overall consumer price inflation well above the

Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) 4.7% target by March 2019, raising odds that the RBI may raise rates more than once in coming months.

While markets have already priced in one rate hike in the months ahead, further hikes could put a damper on growth as Asia’s third-largest economy goes into an election year.

Santosh Shetty, the owner of Mumbai’s Satish Restaurant & Bar, said business had declined by 50% after the implementa­tion of demonetisa­tion and GST, but had returned to normal since January despite both raw material and menu prices rising.

“The raw material cost has gone up for all items for us, from vegetables to chicken, mutton, eggs and spices by 15%-25%, accordingl­y we have also raised our menu prices,” he said. “Customers are willing to pay higher rates as they know that prices are rising everywhere.” The expenditur­e boom is not just in cities.

Conglomera­te Hindustan Unilever, which has a deep rural reach and whose sales are often taken as a barometer for rural demand, has seen strong growth in personal care and home care products in the March quarter over last year.

With a good monsoon forecast this year, farm incomes are likely to rise, economists say.

Economists note that while the surge in consumer spending helped India post robust 7.7% growth in the March quarter, it is also a potential inflation landmine.

India’s May headline inflation rose to a four-month high of 4.87%, driven by 6.2% core inflation that excludes food and fuel. Within the core figure, recreation and amusement inflation, which has been on an uptrend since January, rose to an annual 4.93% in May. Personal care inflation rose for the third straight month to 5.61%.

These, along with items including transport, clothing and household services, comprise nearly 40% to the inflation basket, making it a concern for the RBI, which raised its policy rate for the first time in over four years in early June.

“Core inflation has recovered from the troughs hit after the twin shocks of demonetisa­tion and GST,” said A. Prasanna, chief economist at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership.

“If core CPI momentum picks up and underlying inflation sustains around 5%, there could be a risk of the monetary policy committee raising rates more steeply than expected,” he said, adding he expects another rate hike by October along with shift to a tightening stance.

The so-called demonetisa­tion and GST implementa­tion had hit businesses and households with wage growth slowing to 6% in April-June 2017 from 10%a year ago. It also sent the consumer confidence index for the year ahead sliding to 114.7 in November 2017 – its lowest level in four years, RBI data showed.

However, 2018 is looking a lot rosier. Wages have risen an average of 7%-8% percent and the consumer confidence index for the year ahead also improved to 118.4 in May. Consumer goods companies, including automobile­s, have seen strong demand.

Passenger vehicle sales rose by an annual 19.6% in May from 7.5% in April despite rising fuel prices. In June 2017, auto sales were down 11.2% from a year ago. “The fact is there is demand and so these companies have pricing power,” said Saion Mukherjee, head of equity research, India at Nomura.

“Higher volumes in consumer discretion­ary companies, especially autos, staples are flowing into higher margins.”

However, property prices remain muted, due to a huge overhang of unsold houses keeping a lid on prices.

Meanwhile, risks loom from high oil prices and tighter financing conditions with rising interest rates.

Further rate hikes will add to higher costs of borrowing and stifle growth at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi is looking for a boost ahead of general elections due by May.

“Often a rate hike is equated with credibilit­y,” said Siddhartha Sanyal, chief India economist at Barclays.

“But the impact of rate hikes in India can be more direct on growth than on inflation. Rate hikes tighten financing conditions and often impact growth, but large part of the CPI basket like food, healthcare, education is relatively less sensitive to interest rates.”

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