Except manufactured items, prices of which rose by 2.04%, inflation of primary products and the fuel group contracted by 0.98% and 4.91% respectively. Photo: Reuters
New Delhi: India’s economy may be staring at deflation, at least statistically, a condition where prices come down below their level a year ago with inflation rate turning negative, taking away pricing power from companies, eroding their profit, and forcing them to lay off employees.
The situation arose with the wholesale price inflation rate turning zero in November, meaning overall prices didn’t rise from their level a year ago. In October, WPI (Wholesale Price Index) inflation was 1.77%.
Except manufactured items, prices of which rose by 2.04%, inflation of primary products and the fuel group contracted by 0.98% and 4.91%, respectively, as vegetable prices fell by 28.57% and petroleum product prices came down after global crude prices fell sharply.
WPI-based inflation was last in the negative territory in the three months from June to August in 2009.
Inflation of manufactured items came down for the third consecutive month, the first such occurrence since the peak of Lehman crisis in 2008. Inflation rate of textiles, food, chemicals and basic metals declined, while leather, cement wood and paper saw a sequential pickup.
However, many analysts feel an eroding base effect, especially for food items with a probable lower kharif or monsoon crop output, may see wholesale price inflation picking up again.
The latest wholesale inflation print comes at a time when India’s factory output contracted unexpectedly in October for the first time in seven months and in its worst performance in three years, while retail inflation touched a new low since the series was launched in 2012. Though the central bank now focuses solely on retail inflation, a 0% WPI inflation will add to the clamour for an interest rate cut to spur consumer demand and investment.
Data released on Friday showed retail inflation measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) eased to 4.38% in November compared with 5.52% a month ago, while the Index of Industrial Production shrank 4.2% in October, dragged down by manufacturing, which contracted by 7.6%.
Sen said 0% WPI inflation shows that demand pressure is starting to bite really hard in the economy and that the government needs to boost infrastructure investment as soon as possible.
“The recent data on capital goods and consumer durables reflect persistent weak demand conditions. In addition, the global recovery remains scattered and this is reflected in our export growth which was seen waning in the past few months. Amidst the current situation, a cut in the interest rates will at least provide some impetus to domestic demand,” he added.
Data separately released by the commerce ministry showed that merchandise exports grew in single digits at 7.27% to $25.96 billion while imports increased by 26.8% to $42.82 billion, leading to an 18-month high trade deficit, driven mainly by skyrocketing gold imports and high electronics imports.
Higher supply from the US, lower global demand and unwillingness on the part of Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut supply has led crude oil prices to plummet to a five-year low at around $60 per barrel.
In its monetary policy review earlier this month, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) kept policy rates unchanged despite pressure from the government and industry lobbies to cut rates.
The central bank said that although November inflation is expected to show a further easing, “the favourable base effect that is driving down headline inflation will likely dissipate and inflation for December may well rise above current levels”.
“Over the next 12-month period, inflation is expected to retain some momentum and hover around 6%, except for seasonal movements, as the disinflation momentum works through. Accordingly, the risks to the January 2016 target of 6% appear evenly balanced under the current policy stance,” RBI said at the time.
Sakshi Arora and Garima Singh contributed to this story.
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