The Free Press Journal

CRUDE SHOCK: WPI rises to 14-month high Wholesale Price Index jumps to 4.43% in May

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Inflation based on wholesale prices shot up to a 14-month high of 4.43 per cent in May on increasing prices of petrol and diesel, prompting industry to demand action from policymake­rs to keep fuel prices under check.

The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) based inflation stood at 3.18 per cent in April and 2.26 per cent in May last year.

According to government data released on Thursday, inflation in food articles was at 1.60 per cent in May 2018, as against 0.87 per cent in the preceding month.

Inflation in 'fuel and power' basket rose sharply to 11.22 per cent in May from 7.85 per cent in April as prices of domestic fuel increased in line with rising global crude oil rates.

Inflation in vegetables climbed to 2.51 per cent in May, with potato inflation at a peak of 81.93 per cent.

Price rise in fruits was in double digits at 15.40 per cent, while pulses saw a deflation of 21.13 per cent.

May inflation at 4.43 per cent was a 14-month peak. The previous high was in March 2017, when the WPI inflation stood at 5.11 per cent.

Industry chamber Assocham called for government action to tame fuel price rise saying increasing prices of petrol and diesel may significan­tly impact import bills, which may subsequent­ly have an impact on exchange rates.

"Besides, it might also negatively impact input prices for the industry which has already started feeling the pressure on its profitabil­ity," Assocham Secretary General D S Rawat said.

Icra Principal Economist Aditi Nayar said core WPI inflation rose sharply to 4.4 per cent in May from 3.6 per cent in the previous month, with a rise in 15 of the subindices. This reflects the pass through of higher input costs, and a weaker rupee.

"The WPI inflation is expected to harden by up to 0.80 per cent before easing somewhat in the July-September quarter. Key factors that would influence the inflation trajectory include the level at which global crude oil prices stabilise and the extent to which they are transmitte­d to domestic fuel prices, the trend in the monsoon dispersion and the extent of change in MSPs," Na- yar said.

The WPI inflation for March has been revised upwards to 2.74 per cent from the provisiona­l estimate of 2.47 per cent.

In its second monetary policy review for the fiscal, the Reserve Bank earlier this month hiked interest rate by 0.25 per cent-- the first hike in more than four years -due to growing concerns about inflation stoked by rising global crude oil prices as well as domestic price increases.

The price of Indian basket of crude surged from $66 a barrel in April to around $74 currently.

Data released earlier this week showed retail inflation jumped to a 4-month high of 4.87 per cent in May on costlier food items such as fruits, vegetables and fuel. RBI mainly takes into account retail inflation data while formulatin­g monetary policy.

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