IANS | 18 Aug, 2023
The extent of the jump in food inflation and other upside risks to
inflation can compel the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to go in for at
least a symbolic rate hike to anchor inflationary expectations, said
Sujan Hajra, Chief Economist and Executive Director, Anand Rathi Shares
and Stock Brokers.
This is even more likely because the RBI views
inflation as primarily a monetary phenomenon requiring monetary policy
action to control inflation, irrespective of whether it is supply or
demand sided.
These have adverse implications for the financial markets, he said.
The
case for a rate cut in the next 12 months seems to have vanished with
adverse consequences for the financial markets, including debt and
equity.
Despite upwardly revising inflation forecasts, the RBI
stayed away from outright tightening of the monetary policy in August
under the presumption of food inflation being transitory, Hajra said.
Apart
from high food inflation, the sharp jump in global crude oil and grain
prices are serious concerns. While edible oil inflation is currently
extremely benign, the global El Nino effect can change the situation.
Progressive softening of core inflation is a silver lining, he said.
At
7.4 per cent in July, India recorded the highest inflation in the last
15 months. On an annualised basis, food inflation jumped nearly 70 per
cent and fuel more than 20 per cent, resulting in an over 50 per cent
jump in non-core inflation. The silver lining included the year-on-year
fall in fuel and core inflation, he added.
The year-on-year food
inflation jumped from 4.7 per cent in June to 10.6 per cent in July.
While above 200 per cent inflation in tomato was a major driving force,
many other items under fruit and vegetable recorded high inflation
chiefly on account of weather disturbances in the recent past.