Inflation, as measured by the Wholesale Price Index (WPI), was 6.89 percent in March. In April last year, it was 9.74 percent.
Vegetables
turned costlier by 60.97 percent during April. In March, the rate of
price rise in vegetables was 30.57 percent. Pulses were expensive 11.29
percent.
Milk
became costlier by 15.51 percent, while rice and cereals turned
costlier by 5.68 percent and 5.8 percent respectively. Prices of potato
too rose by 53.44 percent.
Besides, eggs, meat and fish prices rose 17.54 percent during the month, slightly lower from 17.71 percent in March.
However,
as per the official data released on Monday, inflation for the overall
food items category was 10.49 percent in April, as against 10.66 percent
in March.
Onion prices declined (-)12.11 percent in April. The rate of decline was (-)24.23 percent in March.
Food articles have 14.3 percent share in the WPI basket.
Inflation in the price of manufactured goods increased marginally to 5.12 percent in April, from 4.87 percent in March.
Inflation in the price of manufactured goods increased marginally to 5.12 percent in April, from 4.87 percent in March.
The headline inflation number for February was revised upwards to 7.39 percent, from the provisional estimate of 6.95 percent.
Inflation in overall primary articles inched up to 9.71 percent in April, from 9.62 percent in March.
On
year-on-year basis, among manufactured items, iron grew dearer by 17.98
percent while edible oil prices rose by 11.10 percent.
Inflation in tobacco products and basic metals was 9.48 percent and 10.72 percent respectively.
Non-food
primary articles, which include fibres and oilseeds increased slightly
by 1.61 percent in April. In March, it was (-)1.2 percent.
Inflation
in the fuel and power segment was 11.03 percent on an annual basis. The
rate of price rise was 10.41 percent in the previous month.
Experts
said the inflationary pressure, driven by prices of food articles, will
keep the pressure on the government to remove supply side bottlenecks.
Overall inflation hovered at double digit for most of 2010 and 2011.
The
Reserve Bank hiked key policy rates 13 times, totalling 350 basis
points, between March 2010 and October 2011 to tame inflation.
Since
January, RBI has resorted to injecting liquidity into the financial
system, by reducing Cash Reserve Ratio for banks. Besides, it has called
for fiscal steps by the government to combat inflation.
However,
in its annual monetary policy last month, RBI cut key lending rate by
50 basis points to lower borrowing costs amid falling industrial and
economic growth.
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