City
Epaper

Wholesale inflation eases in January in line with retail figures

By ANI | Updated: February 14, 2025 13:15 IST

New Delhi [India], February 14 : In line with the moderation in retail inflation, wholesale inflation in India too ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], February 14 : In line with the moderation in retail inflation, wholesale inflation in India too witnessed a decline in January.

The annual rate of inflation based on all India Wholesale Price Index (WPI) number is 2.31 per cent (provisional) for January 2025, government data showed Friday.

The positive rate of inflation in January was primarily due to an increase in prices of manufacture of food products, food articles, other manufacturing, non-food articles and manufacture of textiles.

Wholesale inflation continues to remain in the positive territory for over a year now. Economists often say a little rise in wholesale inflation is good as it typically incentivizes goods manufacturers to produce more.

For the food index, which has 24.38 per cent weightage, the rate of wholesale inflation was at 7.47 per cent in January, against 8.89 per cent in December.

The government releases index numbers of wholesale prices on a monthly basis on the 14th of every month (or the next working day). The index numbers are compiled with data received from institutional sources and selected manufacturing units across the country.

In April last year, the wholesale inflation went into negative territory. Similarly, in the initial days of COVID-19, in July 2020, the WPI was reported negative. Notably, the wholesale price index (WPI)based inflation had been in double digits for 18 months in a row till September 2022.

Meanwhile, India's retail inflation was at 4.3 per cent in January, hitting a five-month low and continuing to comfortably remain between RBI's 2-6 per cent target range.

The country was facing high food inflation over the past few months, mainly due to an increase in the inflation of vegetables, fruits, oils and fats. It now seems to have abated. High food prices were a pain point for the policymakers in India, who wished to bring retail inflation to 4 per cent on a sustainable basis.

The RBI had kept the repo rate elevated at 6.5 per cent for nearly five years to keep inflation contained. The repo rate is the rate of interest at which the RBI lends to other banks. The RBI has recently reduced the repo rate by 25 basis points to put a thrust on growth and consumption in the economy.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIndore Bus Accident: 3 Killed, 9 Injured After Passenger Bus Falls Into Gorge In Simorl

NationalDelhi CM Rekha Gupta to Begin 3-day Bihar poll campaign from today

InternationalTaiwan detects two Chinese military aircraft, vessels near its territory

LifestyleToday's Horoscope, November 4, 2025: Check Your Zodiac Signs Predictions, Lucky Numbers and Colours

InternationalTrump administration to partially fund SNAP benefits amid govt shutdown

Business Realted Stories

BusinessOpenAI to run its advanced AI workloads on AWS's infrastructure under a multi-year tie-up

BusinessNortheast emerging as new frontier of Indo-French collaboration: Jyotiraditya Scindia

BusinessFTA talks: EU negotiators in New Delhi to deliberate on core trade areas

BusinessIndia, Bahrain advance talks on Bilateral Investment Treaty and CEPA to boost economic ties: MEA

BusinessIndia plans Rs 65,400 crore push to build its own fighter jet engines by 2035