Retail inflation slows to 5-month low of 4.3 pc in Jan: Govt data
According to the data, the top five items showing the highest year on year inflation were coconut oil (54.2 per cent), potato (49.61 per cent), coconut (38.71 per cent), garlic (30.65 per cent), peas (30.17 per cent).
PTI
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Retail Inflation fell to a five-month low of 4.31 per cent in January, mainly due to a decline in the prices of vegetables, eggs, and pulses
NEW DELHI, 12 FEB
Continuing the downward trend, retail inflation fell to a
five-month low of 4.31 per cent in January, mainly due to a decline in the
prices of vegetables, eggs, and pulses.
The
Consumer Price Index-based retail inflation was 5.22 per cent in December and
5.1 per cent in January 2024. The previous low inflation was in August 2024 at
3.65 per cent. The Consumer Price Index has been on a decline since October.
The
inflation in the food basket was 6.02 per cent in January, the lowest after
August 2024 when it was 5.66 per cent.
There
is a decline of 91 basis points in headline inflation of January 2025 in
comparison to December 2024 and it is the lowest year-on-year inflation after
August 2024, the National Statistics Office (NSO) data showed.
According
to the data, the top five items showing the highest year on year inflation were
coconut oil (54.2 per cent), potato (49.61 per cent), coconut (38.71 per cent),
garlic (30.65 per cent), peas (30.17 per cent).
On
the other hand, the key items having the lowest year on year inflation in
January were jeera (-32.25 per cent), ginger (-30.92 per cent), dry chilies
(-11.27 per cent), brinjal (-9.94 per cent), LPG (excluding conveyance) (-9.29
per cent).
Last
week, the Reserve Bank years effected a rate cut of 25 basis points after a gap
of five years to spur growth as inflation was in its comfort zone. The central
bank has been mandated by the government to ensure CPI remains at 4 per cent
with a margin of 2 per cent on either side.
NSO
further said a significant decline in headline and food inflation in the rural
sector was observed in January 2025.
It
was 4.64 per cent in January compared to 5.76 per cent in the preceding month.
The
food inflation in the rural sector was 6.31 per cent in comparison to 8.65 per
cent in December 2024.
Similarly,
urban inflation witnessed a sharp decline from 4.58 per cent in December 2024
to 3.87 per cent in January. Food inflation decreased from 7.9 per cent in
December to 5.53 per cent in January 2025.
Housing
inflation rate was marginally higher in January 2.76 per cent over December.
"The
significant decline in headline inflation and food inflation during the month
of January, 2025 is mainly attributed to decline in inflation of vegetables,
eggs, pulses and products, cereals and products, education, clothing and
health," NSO said.
The
data further showed that top five states which had higher inflation than the
national average in January were Kerala (6.76 per cent), Odisha (6.05 per
cent), Chhattisgarh (5.85 per cent), Haryana (5.1 per cent), and Bihar (5.06
per cent).
The
lowest inflation was in Delhi at 2.02 per cent.
The
NSO collects price data from selected 1,114 urban markets and 1,181 villages
covering all States/UTs on a weekly roster.
Commenting
on the data, Aditi Nayar, Chief Economist, ICRA said the CPI inflation fell
appreciably sharper than expected to a five-month low, led primarily by food
items, vindicating the unanimous rate cut effected by the Reserve Bank's
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) last week.
"Looking ahead, ICRA believes that the growth-inflation outlook suggests that there is room for another 25 bps rate cut in either the April or the June 2025 meetings. The exact timing of the same would depend on the incoming data, global developments, and the movements in the USD/INR pair," she added.
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