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WPI inflation has remained in double digits for the ninth consecutive month beginning April. Inflation in November was 14.23 per cent, while in December 2020 it was 1.95 per cent.
Inflation in food articles, however, spiked to a 23-month high at 9.56 per cent in December, against 4.88 per cent in November. The vegetable price rise rate jumped to 31.56 per cent, against 3.91 per cent in the previous month.
In the food articles category, pulses, wheat, cereals, and paddy all witnessed a month-on-month price rise, while potato, onion, fruits and egg, meat, and fish saw some softening.
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Inflation in manufactured items was lower at 10.62 per cent in December, against 11.92 per cent in the previous month.
In the fuel and power basket, the rate of price rise was 32.30 per cent in December, against 39.81 per cent in November.
Data released earlier this week showed retail inflation based on Consumer Price Index (Combined) rose to 5.59 per cent in December, from 4.91 per cent a month ago as food prices inched up.
ICRA Chief Economist Aditi Nayar said the food inflation has spiked from the marginal 0.1 per cent in October 2021, to an unpleasant 23-month high of 9.6 per cent in December 2021, reflecting the unfavorable base, particularly for vegetables.
”Notwithstanding the continued double-digit WPI inflation in December 2021, we expect the MPC to pause in February 2022. The duration of the current wave and the severity of restrictions will determine whether policy normalization (change in stance to neutral along with hike in reverse repo rate) can commence in April 2022, or be delayed further to June 2022.
”Once normalization commences, we subsequently expect two repo rate hikes of 25 bps each, followed by a pause to reassess the durability of growth,” Nayar said.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is slated to announce its monetary policy on February 9.
Acuité Ratings & Research Chief Analytical Officer Suman Chowdhury said the double-digit year-on-year print continues to reflect the inflationary pressures in the manufacturing and the services sector.
The data indicates that the incremental price pressures in the primary article and the fuel segments have eased in the previous month although a fresh rise in global crude prices can make such a relief temporary.
”Acuité nevertheless expects a further pass-through of input costs in manufactured goods if demand continues to revive or additional supply chain challenges surface due to the new pandemic wave. We expect continuing supply-side bottlenecks, raw material shortages, and high commodity prices to hold the core inflation at high levels in the near term,” he added.