Retail inflation eases below 4% in February
Retail inflation stuck to RBI's target range in February, raising hopes of a further reduction in interest rates
Retail inflation eased below 4% in February on declining vegetable prices, sticking to the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) target range and raising hopes of a further reduction in interest rates.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 3.61% from a year ago, data released by the statistics ministry showed on Wednesday, when compared with a revised inflation reading of 4.3% in January.
Food inflation fell to 3.75% from a revised 5.97% in January, with vegetable prices declining 1.07% year-on-year when compared with an 11.35% jump in January.
Declining prices offers the regulator wriggle room to cut borrowing rates amid a slump in economic growth.
Last month, RBI lowered its policy rate for the first time in about almost half a decade.
Analysts in a Bloomberg survey expect RBI to cut rates by another 50 basis points this calendar year to shore up demand. One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.
A weakening rupee, however, amid geopolitical tensions and global trade wars will pile up pressure on RBI as prices are expected to climb.
The Indian currency is among the worst-performing currencies across emerging markets this year, Bloomberg data showed.
Meanwhile, the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) grew 5% in January, when compared with a revised reading of 3.5% in December, data released separately showed.
Manufacturing output, which constitutes a major portion of the IIP, rose 5.5% in January when compared with 3.4% in December.
Mining also rose, growing 4.4% against 2.7% in December, though the electricity sector saw a slowdown, growing only at 2.4% against 6.2% growth in December.
Sign up to our daily newsletter for more updates!