The Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation for the month of July came at 3.54%, the lowest in five years and below the RBI tolerance band of 4-6%. This has excited some market participants as their hopes of an earlier rate cut by RBI have been rekindled.
I am however not sensing any imminent rate cut, for the following simple reasons.
(i) The headline inflation number is significantly impacted by a strong base effect, as the CPI inflation in the base period (July 2023) was 7.4%. Sequentially, the inflation has risen 1.42% MoM in July 2024 against 1.33% MoM rise in June 2024. As of now, there is no indication of a sustainable decline in inflation trajectory.
(ii) Core CPI inflation in July 2024 was 3.3% against 3.1% in the preceding two months. This is the first rise in core CPI after twelve months of consistent decline.
(iii) Food inflation remained sticky, rising 2.47% in July 2024 after a 2.69% rise in June 2024. Vegetable prices were higher by 14% MoM in July 2024. It is pertinent to recall that the RBI governor laid significant emphasis on food inflation in his bi-monthly monetary policy statement.
The governor stated, “our target is the headline inflation wherein food inflation has a weight of about 46 per cent. With this high share of food in the consumption basket, food inflation pressures cannot be ignored. Further, the public at large understands inflation more in terms of food inflation than the other components of headline inflation. Therefore, we cannot and should not become complacent merely because core inflation has fallen considerably”.
He further added, “high food inflation adversely affects household inflation expectations, which have a significant impact on future trajectory of inflation. Household inflation expectations, after witnessing a moderating trend between May 2022 and September 2023, have edged up on the back of high food inflation since November 2023.35 Persistently high food inflation and unanchored inflation expectations – if they materialise – could lead to spillovers to core inflation through pick-up in wages on cost-of-living considerations. This, in turn, could be passed on by firms in the form of higher prices for services as well as goods, especially in a scenario of strong aggregate demand. Third, these behavioural changes can then result in overall inflation becoming sticky, even after food inflation recedes.”
He categorically admitted that “The MPC may look through high food inflation if it is transitory; but in an environment of persisting high food inflation, as we are experiencing now, the MPC cannot afford to do so. It has to remain vigilant to prevent spillovers or second round effects from persistent food inflation and preserve the gains made so far in monetary policy credibility.”
(iv) As per the latest Households’ Inflation Expectation Survey (August 2024), A larger share of households expects higher general prices and inflation as compared to the previous survey round. Households’ median perception of current inflation rose by 20bps to 8.2% in the latest survey round; their inflation expectations for the three months and one year ahead periods also increased by 20bps each.
The market trends in August indicate that
vegetable prices have recorded material rise in the month of August also due to
crop damage by excess rains and logistic issues. It is therefor likely that
August food inflation may come even higher. Expecting any rate cut on 9th
October may therefore not be reasonable; unless the US Fed cuts dramatically in
September, raising the
specter of recession.