HomeNewsBusinessEconomyCPI inflation rockets to 17-month high of 6.95% in March from 6.07% in February

CPI inflation rockets to 17-month high of 6.95% in March from 6.07% in February

The rise in inflation in March is far more than expected, with a Reuters poll showing economists saw inflation increasing to 6.35 percent.

April 12, 2022 / 18:41 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

India's retail inflation jumped to a 17-month high of 6.95 percent in March from 6.07 percent in February, according to data released on April 12 by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation print for March is well above the consensus estimate. As per a Reuters poll, economists had expected CPI inflation to rise to 6.35 percent.

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This is the third consecutive month in which inflation has come in above the 6 percent upper bound of the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) mandate, averaging 6.3 percent in January-March. As such, 6 percent-plus inflation in April-June and July-September will see the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) failing to meet its mandate.

The RBI's latest forecast pegs average CPI inflation at 6.3 percent in April-June and 5.8 percent in July-September.

The sharp increase in CPI inflation in March was driven by an increase in prices across all but one of the major groups of the basket, with only the index of the housing component of the CPI declining on a month-on-month basis. This suggests the strengthening of price pressures.

Mar 2022 inflationChange in the index, Mar 2022 vs Feb 2022
CPI6.95%1.0%
Food index7.68%1.4%
  Cereals4.93%0.8%
  Meat, fish9.63%5.0%
  Oils, fats18.79%5.3%
  Vegetables11.64%-1.6%
  Pulses2.57%0.1%
Clothing, footwear9.40%0.9%
Housing3.38%-0.1%
Fuel, light7.52%0.9%
Miscellaneous7.02%0.7%

Among food items, some of the largest sequential price increases were visible in animal proteins, with the index for meat and fish surging by 5.0 percent month-on-month in March. Worryingly, the index for oils and fats rose by an even larger 5.3 percent on a month-on-month basis, which is likely to raise pressure on the government to make edible oils cheaper.