New Delhi, Apr 18: The wholesale price index- (WPI)-based inflation rate fell to a 29-month low of 1.34 percent in March from 3.85 percent in February due to a higher base effect amid contraction in the prices of manufactured products and softening of fuel costs.
The factory-gate inflation was 14.63 percent in March 2022. It was for the sixth consecutive month that the wholesale inflation was down to single digits, after remaining in double digits for 18 months. It was 1.31 percent in October 2020.
Data released by the Commerce and industry ministry on Monday showed that prices for manufactured items (-0.77 percent) contracted in March from 1.94 percent in February, led by a decelerated price rise in items like chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and cement, and a dip in the prices of manufactured food products (-2.96 percent), paper (-1.01 percent), and wood (-0.83 percent). Contraction in prices continued in textiles (-4.93 percent) and fats (-21.33 percent). Rajani Sinha, the chief economist at CARE Ratings, said manufactured products had seen a deflation for the first time in about three years, largely due to lower textile and metals prices. However, food inflation, excluding manufactured food items, rose to 5.48 percent in March from 3.81 percent in February. This was led by an acceleration in the price rise of pulses (3.03 percent) and only a marginal contraction in the prices of vegetables (-2.2 percent). On the other hand, prices of cereals (9.48 percent), paddy (7.54 percent), wheat (9.16 percent), milk (8.48 percent), and fruits (4.89 percent) decelerated in March. While a high base and the downtrend in wholesale prices of most essential commodities in early April 2023 are likely to soften the year-on-year food inflation slightly, the possibility of a heatwave in the ongoing month could impart upward pressures on prices of perishables, ICRA Chief Economist Aditi Nayar said. Besides, fuel inflation eased to 8.96 percent in March from 14.82 percent in February. It was led by a deceleration in the price rise of petrol (6.48 percent) and high-speed diesel (11.85 percent). However, after contracting for four straight months, LPG prices accelerated to 3.31 percent in March. The fall in WPI comes after retail inflation declined to 5.66 percent in March, coming below the central bank’s upper tolerance limit of 6 percent for the first time in 2023. In April, the six-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) unanimously decided to keep the policy repo rate unchanged at 6.5 percent but declined to concede that the rate cycle had peaked. Although the RBI tracks retail inflation for its monetary policy decisions, easing wholesale price inflation may lead to expectations of a fall in retail inflation in the coming months.
The divergence between retail and wholesale price inflation has now increased to 432 basis points (bps) in March from a meager 24 bps in November. Madan Sabnavis, the chief economist at Bank of Baroda, said the indications were that the WPI inflation would be in the lower range of 2-3 percent in the coming months. “However, this will not be important from the point of view of credit policy, though it may not spell good news for the manufacturing sector in terms of pricing power,” he said.