Food inflation surges to 12.21% for week current 22nd Oct
Food inflation, as measured by the Wholesale Price Index (WPI), stood at 11.43 per cent in the previous week.
The rate of price rise of food items stood at 13.55 per cent in the corresponding week of the previous year.
As
per data released by the government on Thursday, vegetables became
28.89 per cent costlier on a year-on-year basis. Pulses grew costlier by
11.65 per cent, fruits by 11.63 per cent and milk by 11.73 per cent.
Eggs, meat and fish also became 13.36 per cent more expensive on an annual basis, while cereal prices were up 4.13 per cent.
Onions became 20.33 cheaper. Wheat prices were also down 1.54 per cent year-on-year during the week under review.
Commenting
on the latest food inflation numbers, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee
said the rise in rate of price rise was a matter of "grave concern",
but attributed this to the festive season, which led to an increase in
demand.
"Inflation
is still a matter of grave concern. This is also the affect of the
festive season. November onward, the real trend for the remaining four
months of the fiscal will be available," he told reporters in New Delhi.
On
a weekly basis, inflation in the overall primary articles category
stood at 12.08 per cent, compared to 11.75 per cent in the previous
week.
Primary articles have over 20 per cent weight in the wholesale price index.
Inflation
in non-food articles, including fibres, oil seeds and minerals, was
recorded at 6.43 per cent during the week under review, as against 7.67
per cent in the week ended 15th October.
Fuel and power inflation stood at 14.50 per cent during the week ended 22nd October, compared to 14.70 per cent in the previous week.
The
upsurge in food prices is likely to exert further pressure on the
government and the Reserve Bank to tackle the situation expeditiously.
Headline
inflation, which also factors in manufactured items, has been above the
9 per cent-mark since December, 2010. It stood at 9.72 per cent in
September this year.
The RBI has hiked interest rates 13 times since March, 2010, to tame demand and curb inflation.
In
its second quarterly review of the monetary policy last month, the apex
bank said it expects inflation to remain elevated till December on
account of the demand-supply mismatch, before moderating to 7 per cent
by March, 2012.
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