Inflation
- Definition of Inflation – Inflation is a rise in general price levels. It reduces purchasing power.
- Types of Inflation – Demand-pull and cost-push inflation impact the economy differently. Both must be monitored.
- WPI and CPI – Wholesale Price Index and Consumer Price Index measure inflation. CPI is more relevant for monetary policy.
- Core Inflation – Excludes food and fuel prices. It indicates long-term inflation trends.
- Causes of Demand-Pull Inflation – Caused by excess demand over supply. Often driven by rise in incomes and government spending.
- Causes of Cost-Push Inflation – Results from increased production costs. Rising wages and raw material costs contribute.
- Imported Inflation – Occurs when import prices rise. India faces this due to crude oil dependency.
- Food Inflation – Driven by supply chain issues and monsoon failures. Impacts poor households the most.
- Inflation Targeting – India targets 4% inflation (±2%). RBI adjusts monetary policy accordingly.
- Monetary Policy Tools – Repo rate, CRR, and OMO help control inflation. RBI uses these to regulate liquidity.
- Stagflation – High inflation with low growth is dangerous. It reduces employment and investment.
- Deflation – Persistent fall in prices hurts producers. It slows economic activity.
- Reflation – Policy measures to revive economic activity. Used during recession.
- Hyperinflation – Extreme price rise destroys economic stability. India has never experienced it.
- Effect on Savings – Inflation reduces real savings. Investors seek inflation-protected instruments.
- Effect on Investment – Uncertainty discourages long-term investments. Stable inflation boosts confidence.
- Effect on Exports – High inflation reduces competitiveness. Exporters face higher production costs.
- Effect on Fixed-Income Groups – Salaried and pensioners suffer during inflation. Their income does not rise proportionately.
- Inflation in Rural Areas – Often differs from urban inflation. Food price changes impact rural households.
- Supply Chain Bottlenecks – Poor logistics increase prices. Efficient supply chains reduce inflation.
- Energy Prices – Fuel price hikes increase transport costs. This leads to overall inflation.
- Wage-Price Spiral – Higher wages lead to higher prices. It creates a cycle of inflation.
- Agricultural Constraints – Low productivity causes seasonal inflation. Storage infrastructure must improve.
- Fiscal Deficit Impact – Excessive government borrowing leads to inflation. It increases money supply.
- Role of MSP – Minimum Support Price influences food inflation. Higher MSP may raise market prices.