Khaleej Times

Tight budgets amid soaring prices dampen festive mood

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For Delhi resident Suman Milind, rising prices in India are casting a long shadow this year over the upcoming Diwali festival of lights. The 33-year-old homemaker is tightening her purse strings and altering her spending habits, thanks to soaring costs of fuel, transport and many manufactur­ed items, coupled with stagnant incomes due to the pandemic.

“Earlier we used to get four or five boxes of dry fruits during festivals, but now we hardly get one or two. Because of the high prices,” said Milind, adding that her family has reduced spending on food too by cutting back on meat to just once a week compared to several times a week earlier.

Millions of Indian households are facing similar strains on their budgets ahead of Diwali, which this year falls in early November and marks the country’s busiest shopping season for consumer goods.

Many are foregoing big-ticket purchases such as television sets and jewellery this festive season, according to half a dozen people Reuters spoke to and a consumer survey by Mumbai-based consultanc­y Axis My

India, threatenin­g to slow an economy recovering strongly from the worst of Covid-19.

Pump prices of petrol and diesel are up nearly 35 per cent from a year ago and cooking gas by more than 50 per cent, severely hitting more than three-quarters of households, economists said.

“The sky-rocketing prices of petrol, cooking gas are unbearable when our earnings are still down by nearly 30% from the pre-pandemic period,” said Sultan Singh Tomar, 53, who supplies incense sticks and kitchenwar­e to shops in New Delhi on his scooter.

He said his petrol bill was up by Rs600 rupees ($8) from a year ago and refilling the cooking gas cylinder was costlier by Rs400.

Tomar is among millions of people working in the informal sector who dipped into savings during the pandemic and are now forced to pare back household spending.

For months India’s consumer-pricebased inflation stayed above the central-bank’s comfort level of 6 per cent driven by a rise in food prices.

In September the consumer price index eased to 4.35 per cent, helped by a softening of food prices which make up nearly half of the index. Economists said that painted a better picture than what households are actually facing.

According to an October report by Axis My India on consumer spending trends, more than 88 per cent of respondent­s in a survey said they will not be buying air conditione­rs, television­s, washing machines or jewellery this festival season and nearly half said they will make low-ticket purchases such as clothes.

There is not much that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government can do to alleviate the pain as global crude oil prices hit a three-year high at $85 a barrel, piling up the pressure on a country that imports 80 per cent of its oil.

Bidisha Ganguly, chief economist at industry chamber, Confederat­ion of Indian Industries, said federal and state government­s should cut fuel taxes, the highest among the major economies, as higher fuel prices posed a risk of building up of medium term inflationa­ry pressures.

“(Otherwise) corporate earnings will be impacted in sectors where producers are unable to pass on the cost increases,” she said, adding global shortages were already driving up commodity costs for many products.

Private economists have warned that annual wholesale-price-based inflation — a proxy for producers’ prices — staying in double digits for sixth months in a row could further fuel inflationa­ry pressures as companies pass on rising costs to consumers.

Already some retailers said rising raw material costs were impacting their sales. “Our sales are not even half of what we used to have during the festival period,” said Kawaljit Singh, who sells utensils from a shop in Chandani Chowk in the old quarter of Delhi. He said a rise in prices of metals like steel and copper had pushed up prices of utensils, cookers, festival lighting and gift items by 15 per cent -20 per cent in the last four-five months. —

Earlier we used to get four or five boxes of dry fruits during festivals, but now we hardly get one or two. Because of the high prices

Suman Milind

A Delhi resident

 ?? PTI ?? People buy decoration items ahead of Diwali festival in Kolkata. The festival of lights will be celebrated on November 4. —
PTI People buy decoration items ahead of Diwali festival in Kolkata. The festival of lights will be celebrated on November 4. —

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