Key Points

Crisil predicts India's inflation will average 3.5% this fiscal, down from 4.6% last year, thanks to robust farm output. Food deflation hit a 5-year low at -1.8%, easing household expenses. Lower crude oil prices and stable supply chains are curbing non-food inflation pressures. The trend may prompt further RBI rate cuts, benefiting consumption-driven sectors.

Key Points: Crisil Forecasts India Inflation at 3.5% This Fiscal Amid Food Price Ease

  • Kharif sowing up 4% YoY aiding food inflation control
  • Core inflation drops sharply to 3.9% from 4.4%
  • Thali costs fall 13-14% on lower vegetable, poultry prices
  • RBI rate cuts likely as inflation eases below tolerance band
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India's headline inflation to average 3.5 pc this fiscal: Crisil

Crisil projects India's inflation to drop to 3.5% in FY26, citing strong farm output and stable crude prices boosting household purchasing power.

"Assuming geopolitical uncertainties remain under control, Brent crude oil prices are projected to remain subdued at $60-65 per barrel. — Crisil Report"

New Delhi, Aug 13

A Crisil report on Wednesday projected India’s headline inflation to average 3.5 per cent this fiscal (FY26) from 4.6 per cent in the last, as healthy agricultural production is expected to keep food inflation in check.

Kharif sowing is up a healthy 4.0 per cent on-year (As of August 8) and adequate soil moisture should benefit the rabi crop as well.

“Assuming geopolitical uncertainties remain under control, Brent crude oil prices are projected to remain subdued at $60-65 per barrel in the current fiscal, which should help contain non-food inflation,” said the report.

India’s retail inflation rate has more than halved over the past year, slipping even below the lower end of the Reserve Bank of India’s tolerance band (2 per cent). It slid to 1.6 per cent in July from 2.1 per cent in June. A year ago, it stood at 3.6 per cent.

“Food saw steeper deflation, while core inflation recorded a sharp decline as the impact of mobile tariff revision wore out. Food inflation stood at -1.8 per cent, the lowest since January 2019, further down from -1.1 per cent in June.

Healthy food production and ample foods stocks are aiding softer prices. Core inflation, too, lent support, sharply falling to 3.9 per cent from 4.4 per cent, led by a substantial decrease in transport and communication inflation. Fuel inflation rose to 2.7 per cent from 2.6 per cent.

“Deeper deflation in vegetables and pulses and easing cereal inflation provided a significant downward support. According to Crisil Intelligence’s Thali Index, the cost of vegetarian and non-vegetarian thalis dropped 14 per cent and 13 per cent on-year, respectively, owing to lower vegetable and broiler prices,” the report mentioned.

“We expect another repo rate cut this fiscal. A cumulative cut of 100 basis points so far, along with adequate liquidity, has ensured a swift transmission downstream. The sharp fall in retail inflation should buoy household purchasing power, particularly in the lower income segments. The trend also creates room for further monetary policy easing, which should benefit the interest-sensitive consumption segments,” said the report.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
As a homemaker, I can see the difference in kitchen expenses. Our monthly grocery bill has reduced by nearly ₹1500 compared to last year. Hope the rabi crop stays good too - fingers crossed for normal monsoon!
A
Aditya G
While the numbers look positive, I'm skeptical about how this translates to ground reality. In my city, milk prices just increased again last week. Are we really seeing deflation in essential items?
P
Priyanka N
Lower thali prices are a blessing for middle-class families! But we must ensure farmers aren't suffering due to lower prices. The government should strengthen MSP implementation to protect our annadatas.
M
Michael C
Interesting analysis. The RBI's monetary policy seems to be working well. As an investor, I'm watching how this might affect interest rates on fixed deposits - already seeing downward trends.
K
Kavya N
Hope this translates to lower EMI burdens soon! With repo rate cuts, banks should reduce home loan rates. Planning to buy my first home this year 🤞

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