Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: India’s most closely watched price gauge lands on Monday, and forecasters expect it to nudge higher. Economists polled ahead of the release see June retail inflation at about 4.3%, up from 3.93% in May — which would place it just above the Reserve Bank of India’s 4% medium-term target for the first time in more than a year. The move, if it comes, is modest and largely expected.
The drivers are the familiar, mostly temporary ones: firmer food prices after an uneven start to the monsoon, higher fuel costs, and global energy jitters. Tellingly, core inflation — which strips out volatile food and fuel and better reflects underlying demand — is seen holding near 3.95%, comfortably below target. In other words, the pressure is on the plate and at the pump, not baked deep into the wider economy.
Headline inflation tells you about this month’s vegetables; core inflation tells you about the economy. Right now the second is the reassuring one.
Context matters. The RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee, chaired by Governor Sanjay Malhotra, had already flagged energy prices and an uneven monsoon as swing factors while keeping India on a growth path of around 6.6% for the year — still the fastest among major economies. A brief brush above 4% is well within the band the central bank plans around, not a break from it.
The constructive read is that the tools to steer through are in place: healthy foodgrain buffers, a monsoon now reviving after a dry June, and a policy framework with room to look through transient spikes. The practical way forward is supply-side — smoothing the movement of vegetables, pulses and edible oils to market — so a monsoon-season wobble does not settle into household budgets.













