Retail inflation spike in May might cause RBI to revisit focus on growth risks: Oxford Economics

It added that the underlying dynamics of the May inflation print augur caution and the recovery remains on uncertain ground and with fiscal support in retreat, the RBI will likely be hesitant to remove policy accommodation anytime soon.

PTI
June 15, 2021 / 06:15 PM IST

Retail inflation spike in May might cause the RBI to "revisit its focus on growth risks", global forecasting firm Oxford Economics said on Tuesday adding that a rate hike is still unlikely this year.

It added that the underlying dynamics of the May inflation print augur caution and the recovery remains on uncertain ground and with fiscal support in retreat, the RBI will likely be hesitant to remove policy accommodation anytime soon.

"Consumer inflation spiked in May... This may cause the RBI to revisit its focus on growth risks. Still, we think a rate hike is unlikely this year," Oxford Economics said.

The forecasting firm said that given the evidence from last year, when supply side disruptions had led to an unanticipated spike in inflation, such developments may partly be attributed for the inflation pick-up in May.

"However, as we have highlighted, the 2021 lockdowns are not as stringent; and have allowed for greater movement of people, goods and vehicles.

"This suggests that other factors, such as the passthrough from WPI (Wholesale Price Index) to CPI (Consumer Price Index) and demand-side pressures, are at play as well," it said.

According to Oxford Economics, indeed, the April industrial production growth print surprised to the upside.

"Positive base effects notwithstanding, industrial production grew 1.1 percent month-on-month seasonally adjusted in April after rising 2.2 percent in March. This was led by continued expansion of manufacturing output," it said.

Rising prices of edible oils and protein-rich items pushed the retail inflation to a six-month high of 6.3 percent in May, breaching the comfort level of the Reserve Bank and, thus, rendering reduction in interest rates a difficult proposition in the near term.

The government has asked the RBI to keep the retail inflation at 4 percent with a margin of 2 percent on either side.

Headline inflation surged to 6.3 percent year-on-year in May, from 4.2 percent in April as inflation rose across the board.

Food inflation increased to 5 percent in May from 2 percent in the previous month. Fuel inflation grew 11.6 percent after rising to 8 percent in April. Core inflation (CPI excluding food and fuel) jumped to 6.1 percent from 5.2 percent in the previous month.

Wholesale price-based inflation also accelerated to a record 12.94 percent in May on account of rising prices of crude oil, manufactured goods and the low base of last year due to the COVID-19 lockdown.

While the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation rose from 4.23 percent in April to a six-month high of 6.3 percent in May, food inflation soared from 1.96 percent to 5.01 percent.
PTI
TAGS: #Business #Economy #India #Oxford Economics #RBI #retail inflation
first published: Jun 15, 2021 06:15 pm