Retail inflation hit a 99-month low of 1.54% in September 2025.
The average inflation rate for the first half of the fiscal year is 2.2%, within the RBI’s comfort band of 2%-6%.
The RBI had previously targeted 4% inflation and may need to re-evaluate this target given current low inflation.
The government has attempted to stimulate domestic demand through income-tax and GST rate reductions.
Detailed Insights:
Consistently low inflation suggests that supply is exceeding demand, as seen in the clothing and footwear category with 2.3% inflation.
Faced with oversupply, the government has tried to stimulate domestic demand through income-tax and GST rate reductions, but households are saving rather than increasing consumption.
A sustained increase in real wages is needed, requiring the private sector to increase investments, which have grown in announcements but need to materialize into real projects.
The RBI can help by cutting interest rates significantly in the next Monetary Policy Committee meeting in December.
The RBI needs to address the inaccuracy of its inflation forecasts, which were drastically revised from 4% in April to 2.6% in late September.
Key Concepts Involved:
Retail Inflation: The change in the price of a basket of goods and services that are typically purchased by households.
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC): A committee that decides the policy interest rate to control inflation.
Real Wages: Wages adjusted for inflation, reflecting the actual purchasing power of income.