December 15, 2020
1 min read

India’s Retail Inflation Lowers In November: Report

Cheaper food prices lowered India’s sequential retail price inflation in November.

Sequentially, the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which gauges the retail price inflation, rose at a slower rate of 6.93 per cent in November from 7.61 per cent reported in October.

As per the data furnished by the National Statistical Office (NSO), CPI Urban rose to 6.73 per cent in November from 7.33 per cent in October, while CPI Rural increased to 7.20 per cent last month from 7.75 per cent in October.

The Consumer Food Price Index, increased at a slower rate of 9.43 per cent in November from 11 per cent in October.

The CFPI readings measure the changes in retail prices of food products.

On a YoY inflation rate, prices of vegetables and pulses and products jumped by 15.63 per cent and 17.91 per cent, respectively, in November.

“The headline CPI inflation for November 2020 printed appreciably lower than our expectations, benefiting from stable vegetable prices at the retail level,” said Aditi Nayar, Principal Economist, ICRA.

Sunil Kumar Sinha, Principal Economist, India Ratings and Research, said: “Retail inflation at 6.93 per cent is still outside the comfort zone of RBI. However, core inflation (non-food and non-energy) and core-core inflation (non-food, non-energy and transport & communication) are broadly stable in the range of 5-5.79 per cent and 4.72 per cent and 4.95 per cent respectively since May 2020.”

Also Read: Facebook To Open Up Opportunities For India’s SMBs

Also Read: Interups Inc, Kanti Commercials Submit EoIs For Air India

Previous Story

Facebook To Open Up Opportunities For India’s SMBs

Next Story

Akshay, Rana To Launch ‘Socialswag’

Latest from Economy

Nothing’s CMF Goes Indian with $100M JV

Company has announced a $100 million joint venture with Indian electronics manufacturer Optiemus Infracom Limited….reports Asian Lite News Smartphone maker Nothing has spun off its budget sub-brand CMF into an independent subsidiary,

Islamabad’s Costly CPEC Gamble

Pakistan owes over $7.5B for power plants and nearly $2B in unpaid bills to Chinese energy firms, the article notes. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), once hailed by Islamabad as a game-changing

Kerala sounds alarm over GST reforms

Kerala warns of deep fiscal strain from proposed GST cuts, fearing welfare and salaries may suffer, even as global agencies project India’s economy will stay resilient….reports Asian Lite News Kerala Finance Minister

Pakistan’s Economy Held Hostage by Military

Despite the crisis-ridden economy merely managing to survive on IMF loans, the military seems to be facing no constraints on its spending spree on weapons such as tanks and planes….reports Asian Lite
Go toTop