Inflation in India has been on the rise consistently for the past several months and various reasons can be attributed to it such as soaring food and oil prices, among others.
However, most importantly, the sharply depreciating rupee against the dollar is one of the most significant reasons behind it.
India’s retail inflation rose to 7 per cent in August from 6.71 per cent in July and this was due to higher food prices. In fact, retail inflation has been beyond the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) tolerance limit of 6 per cent for eight months in a row.
A rise in food prices has led to a spike in retail inflation and this is evident from the fact that inflation in the food basket was 7.62 per cent in August, up from 6.69 per cent in July and more than double from 3.11 per cent in August 2021.
Earlier this year, the crude oil price had touched $130 a barrel. However, in September, it slid to less than $85 per barrel. But now they may rise again as OPEC+, the group of oil-producing nations, has decided to cut down oil production.
Rising oil prices directly impact inflation in India. This can be gauged from the fact that India imports more than 85 per cent of its oil requirement.
As crude oil prices start to rise, imports will also go up, which in turn will widen the current account deficit (CAD).
Widening CAD will further weaken the rupee, as in the face of a widening deficit, the country will be forced to sell rupees and buy dollars.
A weak rupee has fuelled inflation in India.
In the RBI on September 30 decided to hike the repo rate by 50 basis points to 5.4 per cent and focus on the withdrawal of accommodation to keep inflation within tolerance limits.
In order to control inflation, the RBI has been hiking repo rates since May this year.
Last week, the central bank also retained its retail inflation forecast for the current financial year at 6.7 per cent.
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the RBI observed on September 30 that inflation is projected to remain above the upper tolerance level of 6 per cent through the first three quarters of 2022-23.
Considering the rising level of inflation, the MPC had decided that further calibrated monetary policy action is needed to keep retail inflation within tolerance limits.
Due to monetary policy tightening across the world, and the continuing war between Ukraine and Russia, the global scenario has worsened as disruptions in supply chains have fuelled price rises.
Resultantly, these prevailing situations have fuelled the risks of recession globally.
This has also impacted stock markets, as India has seen large portfolio outflows worth $13.3 billion during the current financial year.
Volatile global markets have impacted domestic currency and stock markets, thus leading to inflation in India.