"To be very frank, what shall be acceptable and what can be a tolerable level of inflation is very difficult to define. But in our economy, we feel that if we can keep inflationary pressure within 5-6 per cent, it could be ideal, but we can live with 6 to 6.5 per cent," Mukherjee said while addressing business delegates from India and the US in Washington.
He added this year inflation will be a little more. Overall inflation climbed to 9.06 per cent in May from 8.66
per cent in the previous month, fanning fears that high rate of price rise could hurt the economic growth.
Mukherjee said the current inflation level was due to high global commodity prices. "(inflation is) Not because of near supply constraints on the agricultural front ... But the international commodity prices, including food and fuel, is causing severe constraints," he said.
Mukherjee said food prices have started coming down and the government has also tried to cushion the impact of rising crude prices by sacrificing central taxes.
Besides, state governments too have been asked to reduce their taxes on fuel. "I do have hope that it will have some impact. But this (inflation) is going to be a major problem and it would have its impact on the overall growth scenario," he said.