NEW DELHI: Morgan Stanley expects retail inflation to moderate to the Reserve Bank of India’s 6 per cent upper tolerance target only from November.
Retail inflation in India rose sharply in July to 7.44 per cent and, in the process, breached RBI’s 6 per cent upper tolerance target, largely due to a sharp spurt in vegetable, fruit, and pulses prices.
In June too, the overall retail inflation too rose considerably to 4.87 per cent due to a rise in vegetable prices. Back in May, the retail inflation was at 4.25 per cent, hitting a two-year low. It was at 4.7 per cent in April and 5.7 per cent the previous month.
The latest rise in inflation could partly be attributed to the current spurt in tomato and other vegetable prices across India. The rise in tomato prices is reported across the country, and not just limited to a particular region or geography. In key cities, it rose to as high as Rs 150-200 per kg.
Taking into consideration the latest uptick in the retail inflation figures, Morgan Stanley upwardly revised India’s inflation outlook for 2023-24 to an average of 5.7 per cent from 5.4 per cent earlier.
“We now expect inflation to rise in the near term before moderating to below 6 per cent from November. As such, we do not expect rate easing to start until 2Q ’24. Liquidity management will likely remain the focus in RBI’s inflation fight”, it said in a report authored by economists Upasana Chachra and Bani Gambhir.
Notably, retail inflation (Consumer Price Index) in India peaked at 7.8 per cent in April 2022, driven by a reduction in food and core inflation. In some advanced countries, inflation had in fact touched a multi-decade high and even breached the 10 per cent mark.
The RBI’s consistent monetary policy tightening since mid-2022 could be attributed to the substantial decline in inflation numbers in India. India’s retail inflation was above RBI’s 6 per cent target for three consecutive quarters and had managed to fall back to the RBI’s comfort zone only in November 2022.
Under the flexible inflation targeting framework, the RBI is deemed to have failed in managing price rises if the CPI-based inflation is outside the 2-6 per cent range for three quarters in a row.
Barring the recent pauses, the RBI has raised the repo rate by 250 basis points cumulatively since May 2022 in the fight against inflation. Raising interest rates is a monetary policy instrument that typically helps suppress demand in the economy, thereby helping the inflation rate decline.
After the August monetary policy meeting, the Reserve Bank of India too upwardly revised the country’s retail inflation projections for 2023-24 at 5.4 per cent, against 5.1 per cent it projected in its previous monetary policy meeting in June.
A “substantial increase” in headline inflation will occur in the near term, said RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das as part of his remarks after the policy meeting.
He reiterated what he said after the June meeting – “Bringing headline inflation within the tolerance band is not enough; we need to remain firmly focused on aligning inflation to the target of 4.0 per cent”. (ANI)