Retail inflation dipped marginally to 6.44 per cent in February, primarily on account of a slight easing in costs of meals and gas objects although it remained above the Reserve Bank’s consolation stage of 6 per cent for the second month in a row.
As per the federal government knowledge launched on Monday, the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation was at 6.52 per cent in January and 6.07 per cent in February 2022.
The retail inflation charge for the meals basket labored out to be 5.95 per cent in February, marginally decrease than 6 per cent in January.
It was 5.85 per cent in February final 12 months.
As per the information, vegetable costs dipped by 11.61 per cent on an annual foundation, although it recorded a double-digit enhance in spices (20.20 per cent) and cereals and merchandise (16.73 per cent).
A decline in inflation was additionally witnessed in the oils and fat phase.
The value rise remained subdued in segments like meat and fish, eggs, pulses and merchandise, sugar and confectionery and non-alcoholic drinks.
On the opposite hand, the inflation in the gas and light-weight phase labored out to be 9.90 per cent in February.
Also milk and merchandise, clothes and footwear turned dearer in the course of the month.
The knowledge additionally revealed that inflation in rural areas was larger at 6.72 per cent in the course of the month in contrast to 6.10 per cent in city centres.
Except for November and December 2022, retail inflation has remained above the RBI’s higher tolerance stage of 6 per cent since January 2022.
The central financial institution has been mandated by the federal government to make sure the retail inflation stays at 4 per cent with a margin of two per cent on both facet.
The Reserve Bank has projected retail inflation at 6.5 per cent for 2022-23, with the January-December quarter at 5.7 per cent.
To comprise the rising costs, the RBI has hiked rates of interest by 250 foundation factors since May final 12 months.
The newest charge hike of 25 foundation factors in February took the benchmark coverage charge to 6.50 per cent.
Commenting on the information, Icra chief economist Aditi Nayar, stated that given two consecutive CPI inflation prints above 6 per cent, the RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) might go in for one more charge hike, though the choice is probably going to be non-unanimous primarily based on the minutes of the final assessment.
“Moreover, world developments over the following three weeks may influence the MPC’s determination,” she added.
The Reserve Bank is scheduled to announce the following bi-monthly financial coverage, the primary for fiscal 2023-24, on April 6.