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HomeNewsOpinionInflation pipelines swelling as a long period of global macro instability begins

Inflation pipelines swelling as a long period of global macro instability begins

The RBI’s sanguineness on inflation (negative real rates) suggests it considers India an exception to this trend 

June 17, 2022 / 15:36 IST
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As CPI inflation fell to 7 percent in May, some views have emerged it may have peaked in April at 7.8 percent. This is consistent with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s quarterly inflation projection of June 8.

One needs to be careful these days though. The credibility of central banks the world over is under scrutiny.

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One needs to look no further than the United States, where a large number of analysts had converged to the opinion that US inflation had peaked after it eased in April. Instead, the US’ annual inflation rate reversed in May, jolting expectations as had happened last October. It was really brave for the RBI to have ignored the significant amount of inflation stuffed inside the wholesale prices, which have been accelerating over a much stronger base. Only time will tell how much of that will be passed on to the retail buyers.

Consider the swelling pipelines of inflation. The first is wholesale price increases — those in the past that are yet to be passed on, and fresher additions each month. Strong corporate profits do not escape notice; neither does the regular revision of selling prices to consumers. Apart from the manufacturing goods’ burden, there’s the waiting passthrough of higher energy and electricity costs that many analysts have flagged; this includes a widening gap in retail and crude oil import prices, costlier coal imports, and electricity. Services’ inflation is waiting to catch-up more than it has. Food inflation isn’t entirely dependent upon monsoons either; wholesale prices grew into double-digits, 10.9 percent, last month, jumping two points over April.