India Retail Inflation Likely to Average 5.1% in FY27: Crisil Report

Retail inflation in India is projected to average 5.1% in fiscal year 2027, according to a Crisil Ratings report. The consumer price index inflation rose mildly to 3.48% in April from 3.40% in March. The report highlights upside risks from the ongoing West Asia conflict and rising energy costs. It also notes that the RBI's MPC is expected to keep interest rates unchanged in the upcoming policy meeting.

Key Points: India Retail Inflation Seen at 5.1% in FY27: Crisil

  • CPI inflation rose to 3.48% in April from 3.40% in March
  • Retail inflation seen averaging 5.1% in FY27
  • West Asia conflict poses upside risks to inflation
  • RBI MPC expected to keep rates unchanged
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Retail inflation likely to average 5.1 pc in FY27: Report

CPI inflation rose to 3.48% in April. Crisil report says retail inflation may average 5.1% in FY27, with risks from West Asia conflict and energy costs.

"the consumer remains largely protected so far - Crisil Ratings report"

New Delhi, May 13

The consumer price index inflation rose mildly to 3.48 per cent in April from 3.40 per cent in March, and CPI‑based inflation is expected to average 5.1 per cent in fiscal 2027, a report said on Wednesday.

"While the conflict in West Asia has crossed 74 days, the upside risks to retail inflation seem to be materialising at a snail's pace, indicating that the consumer remains largely protected so far," the report from Crisil Ratings said.

The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee is expected to keep rates and stance unchanged in the forthcoming monetary policy, it said.

The energy shock from supply chain disruption has pushed oil prices forecasts up, with Brent crude expected to average $90‑95 per barrel in FY27, roughly 32 per cent higher year‑on‑year, the report forecasted.

While electricity, gas and fuel inflation eased in April due to base effects, transport fuel inflation has been held in check by the government's decision to keep pump prices of petrol and diesel steady.

Core inflation remained steady at 3.7 per cent for the fourth consecutive month as the expected pass-through of higher energy and other input prices to consumers is yet to play out.

Although inflation in restaurants and accommodation services as well as household furnishings and equipment increased as expected, a slower rise in precious metal inflation provided some cushion.

The report flagged that even though the government restrained the rise in retail fuel inflation by keeping the pump prices of petrol and diesel unchanged, these could come under pressure in the coming months.

Producers are expected to pass on the sharp rise in the cost of energy and other inputs, as well as trade and transportation, to consumers, which will likely raise core inflation, it warned.

Further, expected below-normal monsoon rainfall amid likely El Niño conditions and the ongoing heatwaves can hurt agricultural production and exert pressure on food inflation, which is normalising from its lows.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Interesting that core inflation is steady at 3.7% despite energy costs rising. Shows our economy is resilient, but the pass-through to consumers is worrying. If oil hits $90-95, everything from transport to vegetables will cost more. RBI keeping rates unchanged makes sense for now.
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Arjun K
Honestly, living in a metro city, I'm already feeling the pinch. ₹200 for basic groceries that used to cost ₹150 last year. The report says 'consumer remains protected' but my wallet disagrees. Hope the MPC does something to control this.
S
Suresh O
Agriculture is the backbone, and with below-normal monsoon forecast, food inflation is a serious risk. Our farmers need better irrigation support and MSP hikes, not just reports that highlight problems without solutions. The heatwave is already affecting crops in many states.
J
James A
As an expat working in Bangalore, the rising cost of living is noticeable. Restaurants and accommodation inflation are hitting us hard, but it's good that precious metal inflation is slow. Let's hope global tensions ease so oil prices don't skyrocket further.
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Naveen S
I run a small logistics business. Fuel prices being kept steady helps, but raw material costs are up 20% from last year. We can't absorb all that—eventually prices will go up for everyone. The report is right to warn about pass-through inflation. It's coming.

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