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Relief For Indian Consumers, Low Inflation To Boost Real Purchasing Power Of Households: HSBC

Core inflation will likely remain range-bound, led by weaker commodity prices, softer growth, a stronger rupee, and imported disinflation from China, the HSBC Research report said.

Low inflation for the rest of the year will result in improving real purchasing power of households and lowering input costs for corporates in India, an HSBC Research report said on Monday, adding that a less obvious, but equally important benefit, could be via fiscal finances.

The rest of the year will likely get support from lower inflation of about 2.5 per cent for the next six months.

With public granaries stocked up and monsoon rains likely to be favourable, food inflation is set to remain low. Core inflation as well will likely remain range-bound, led by weaker commodity prices, softer growth, a stronger rupee (against the US dollar), and imported disinflation from China, said the report, while updating its 100 indicators database for the country.

These indicators map various sectors, and gives a thorough and sequential picture of growth.

There are some pressures on the FY26 fiscal deficit target from lower-than-budgeted nominal GDP growth and direct tax buoyancy, and higher defence spending.

“However, there are offsetting factors as well, specifically a higher-than-budgeted RBI dividend (Rs 2.7 trillion). Most importantly, however, the option for the government to appropriate some of the fall in global oil prices by raising oil excise tax,” said the HSBC report.

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Given inflation is already low, “we estimate that if the government usurps half of the oil ‘bounty’ instead of lowering pump prices, it will not just meet the fiscal deficit target but also have some extra funds available for growth support,” it added.

The March quarter (1Q25) was a notch better than before, with 66 per cent of the indicators growing positively (versus 64 per cent and 61 per cent in the previous two quarters).

Informal sector consumption led the charge, benefitting from a rise in state capex (in March), a good winter crop, higher real rural wages, and improved rural terms of trade.

On the other hand, urban consumption indicators, such as consumer durables production and imports, were softer.

“We have got a third of the activity data for April and 64 per cent of the indicators are growing positively. Informal sector consumption seems to have picked up further in the month (proxied by domestic non-cess GST),” the report mentioned.

(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)

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