Mon, 22 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Apr 20, 2025 · 18:54
Agriculture News Updated Apr 20, 2025

Prices of ginger, tomato, cauliflower saw steepest decline in March as inflation cools

India's economic landscape is experiencing a significant cooldown in inflation rates this March. The country has witnessed remarkable price drops in key vegetables like ginger and tomato, with declines ranging from 25% to 38%. The Consumer Price Index reveals the lowest inflation level in six years, standing at 4.6%. Rural and urban areas are both experiencing this positive economic trend, with food inflation hitting its lowest point since November 2021.

New Delhi, April 20

As India's retail inflation witnessed six-year low in the month of March, items that witnessed the steepest decline in prices were ginger, tomato, cauliflower, jeera and garlic.

According to the Ministry of Finance data, items that witnessed the steepest decline in prices were ginger (-38.11 per cent), tomato (-34.96 per cent), cauliflower (-25.99 per cent), jeera (-25.86 per cent), and garlic (-25.22 per cent).

In March 2025, the top five items with the highest year-on-year inflation were coconut oil (56.81 per cent), coconut (42.05 per cent), gold (34.09 per cent), silver (31.57 per cent), and grapes (25.55 per cent).

Prices in the health segment saw a mild rise, with inflation at 4.26 per cent in March, up from 4.12 per cent in February.

For the urban sector, housing inflation rose slightly to 3.03 per cent in March 2025 from 2.91 per cent in February.

Inflation in the transport and communication category increased to 3.30 per cent in March 2025 compared to 2.93 per cent in February.

Inflation in the fuel and light category rebounded to 1.48 per cent in March from -1.33 per cent in February, covering both rural and urban areas.

A moderate increase was noted in education-related inflation, rising to 3.98 per cent from 3.83 per cent the previous month.

Retail inflation in India, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which reflects the cost of everyday goods and services, fell to a remarkable 4.6 per cent in the fiscal year 2024-25, the lowest since 2018-19.

The year-on-year food inflation based on the Consumer Food Price Index (CFPI) stood at 2.69 per cent in March 2025, the lowest since November 2021. This marks a sharp decline of 106 basis points from the previous month.

Rural food inflation was 2.82 per cent and urban food inflation was 2.48 per cent

The overall moderation in food prices was led by a drop in inflation across key categories such as vegetables, eggs, pulses and products, meat and fish, cereals and products, and milk and products, according to the ministry.

A notable fall was recorded in both headline and food inflation in rural areas. Headline inflation fell from 3.79 per cent in February to 3.25 per cent in March while food inflation dropped from 4.06 per cent to 2.82 per cent.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rahul K.

Finally some good news! My tomato bills were killing me last year. Hope the prices stay low through summer 🤞

Priya M.

Interesting to see coconut oil at the top of inflation list. As someone from Kerala, this really hits home. Our traditional cooking oil becoming so expensive is worrying 😟

Amit S.

While the vegetable price drop is great, the article doesn't mention how wages haven't kept pace with overall inflation. My salary only increased 3% this year while gold went up 34%!

Sunita R.

As a homemaker, I can confirm cauliflower prices have really come down! Making aloo gobi is much more affordable now 😊

Vikram J.

The data is promising but I wonder how much of this is seasonal vs policy impact. Tomato prices always fluctuate wildly between seasons.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked