The inflation worries are not yet over though the rate of price rise has come down from a peak of 12.82 per cent in August to 8.40 per cent for the week ended November 22, says India's chief statistician Pronab Sen.
"We can't really say that we are completely out of the woods yet," he told PTI pointing out that inflation in the manufacturing and food prices will continue to be there.Noting that inflation has come down mainly on account of moderation in prices of commodities such as oil, iron and steel, Sen said, "Secondary inflationary effects, which is the effect that passes through the manufacturing sector, continues."
It is only when the secondary effects moderate, the inflation would come down, he said, adding "Even at 8.5 per cent inflation is too high". Talking about the variation in inflation for wholesale and retail prices, Sen said, "WPI captures the entire range of production, the full value chain, right from the raw material to the finished product. CPI, on the other hand measures inflation only at the last point, which is the product that is directly sold to the consumer". He further said, "If there is an inflationary impulse at an upstream stage of production, it will show up first in the WPI. "So, what you got is a situation where the WPI peaked at 12.9 per cent a month ago and then it started coming down. "The CPI hasn't peaked yet. It is still going up. Basically, there is a lag".The RBI also pointed out that, "Consumer price inflation, too, can be expected to soften in the months ahead".
Referring to the oil prices, Sen said, the expectation that crude oil prices in the international market can go down to $20 a barrel is 'wrong' and based on the assumption that oil prices will not go up again.
"Oil prices at $43 to the barrel is just too low. That has happened simply because there were extra stocks floating around in the system.
People had to offload them, the speculative element vanished, so all of that happened. But, soon or later that's going to stabilise," he said.