Retail Inflation Expected To Align With Average 4.5% In 2024-25: RBI DG Patra

The inflation has remained below 6% in the last three months.

PTI

Retail inflation is projected to average 4.5% in 2024-25 before aligning with the target on a durable basis in 2025-26.

Source: Vijay Sartape/NDTV Profit)

The retail inflation is projected to average 4.5% in 2024-25 and align with the target on a durable basis by 2025-26, RBI deputy governor Michael Debabrata Patra has said at a conference here.

The government has tasked the Reserve Bank of India to ensure that consumer price index based retail inflation at 4% with a tolerance band of +/- 2% around it.

The inflation has remained below 6% in the last three months.

Retail inflation is projected to average 4.5% in 2024-25 before aligning with the target on a durable basis in 2025-26.

Speaking at the High-Level Conference 'Central Banking at Crossroads' organised by the Reserve Bank of India as a part of the commemoration of its 90th year on Monday, Patra also stressed that the Indian experience is unique in view of the incidence of repetitive shocks to food and fuel prices, which challenged the conduct of monetary policy.

In India, price stability is a shared responsibility under which the government sets the target, and the central bank achieves it, Patra said.

This allows monetary-fiscal coordination without posing risks to financial stability, fiscal consolidation or growth - perhaps a template for countries vulnerable to inflationary pressures emanating from supply shocks, he noted.

Also Read: September CPI Data: India's Retail Inflation Rises To A Nine-Month High Of 5.49%

"It is projected to average 4.5% in 2024-25 before aligning with the target on a durable basis in 2025-26," he added.

Patra also said that in the years ahead, the conduct of inflation targeting - based monetary policy may face even greater challenges.

Central banks face an existential threat to their central mandates from climate change through supply shocks such as food and energy shortages and a decline in productive capacity.

The RBI deputy governor added that while formulating monetary policy, it is considered good housekeeping to evaluate the balance of risks.

From this perspective, IT policy frameworks of the future need to be more robust, realistic and nimble, while exploiting synergies with prudential, fiscal and structural policies and leveraging, he said.

Also Read: India’s Rate-Cut Calls At Risk After Inflation Picks Up Sharply

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