Fuller expression


UPSC Study Note: India's Inflation Dynamics — "Fuller Expression" of Price Pass-Through (June 2026)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Milestone Detail
CPI (Combined) series introduced Base year 2010=100; replaced separate CPI for Industrial Workers, Agricultural Labourers, etc.
CPI base revision to 2012=100 Introduced ~2014; became the operational series for RBI's inflation targeting
Inflation Targeting Framework Enacted via RBI Act amendment (2016); 4% ± 2% as flexible inflation target; MPC constituted
New CPI series 2024=100 Launched 2025-26; first data points released in 2026; MOSPI responsible [S2][S3]
WPI new series New WPI base year series, first numbers due June 2026 [S1]
India's first PPI Producer Price Index being released for first time alongside new WPI in June 2026 [S1]
LPG deregulation trajectory Domestic LPG partially regulated; commercial LPG prices revised more freely; multiple hikes since Feb 2026 [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Price Indices — Key Definitions

Key Numbers — May 2026

Indicator Value
CPI (Headline) — May 2026 3.93% [S1][S2]
CPI (Food) — May 2026 4.78% (up from 4.20% in April) [S1][S2]
Rural food inflation 4.85% [S2]
Urban food inflation 4.66% [S2]
Transport inflation (May) 1.75% (after marginal contraction in April) [S1]
Transport services for goods 7.63% [S1]
Restaurants & accommodation 5.75% [S1]
Personal care & misc. goods 18.46% (precious metals surge) [S1]
Tomato inflation 48.43% (May) vs 35.26% (April) [S2]

RBI Inflation Projections (FY2026-27)

Quarter Projection
Q1 FY27 4.2%
Q2 FY27 5.1%
Q3 FY27 5.9% (peak)
Q4 FY27 5.4%
Full year 5.1% (revised up from 4.6%) [S2]

Institutional Framework


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Social


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's May 2026 CPI inflation was 3.93% — highest in the current CPI series (base 2024=100). [S1][S2]
  2. New CPI base year is 2024=100, replacing the earlier 2012=100 series; released by MOSPI. [S2][S3]
  3. India's first-ever Producer Price Index (PPI) is being released in June 2026 alongside a new WPI series. [S1]
  4. Food inflation in May 2026 stood at 4.78%, up from 4.20% in April; rural food inflation (4.85%) exceeded urban (4.66%). [S1][S2]
  5. Transport services for goods sub-category surged 7.63% in May 2026 — highest among transport divisions. [S1]
  6. Commercial LPG (19 kg) prices rose by approximately ₹1,300 per cylinder — a rise of over 75% since February 2026. [S1]
  7. Personal care and miscellaneous goods category recorded the highest inflation in May 2026 at 18.46%, driven by precious metals. [S1]
  8. Restaurants and accommodation category inflation was 5.75% in May 2026, largely due to commercial LPG cost pass-through. [S1]
  9. RBI revised its FY2026-27 full-year inflation forecast to 5.1% (from earlier 4.6%); inflation expected to peak at 5.9% in Q3 FY27. [S2]
  10. RBI's MPC retained a neutral stance in June 2026 despite rising inflationary pressures. [S1][S2]
  11. Inflation targeting framework in India: RBI Act 1934, amended in 2016; target of 4% ± 2%; implemented by Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).
  12. WPI is published by DPIIT (Ministry of Commerce & Industry); CPI is published by MOSPI — a common confusion point.
  13. Tomato inflation in May 2026: 48.43% (vs. 35.26% in April). [S2]
  14. Four tranches of petrol/diesel hikes beginning mid-May 2026 were the first fuel price increases in four years. [S1][S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — Inflation, Monetary Policy, Price Indices) Also touches: GS-II (Government Policies, DBTL, statutory bodies like MPC)

Syllabus headings: - Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment. - Effects of liberalisation on the economy; inflation and its management.

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Discuss the causes of inflationary pressures in India in 2025-26 and evaluate the adequacy of the RBI's monetary policy response. How does the new Producer Price Index (PPI) strengthen India's price management architecture?" (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "Examine the channels through which global crude oil price shocks transmit to domestic retail inflation in India. What structural reforms can reduce India's vulnerability to such imported inflation?" (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "Analyse the asymmetric burden of food and fuel inflation on rural households in India. What policy interventions can the government deploy to protect the poor during inflationary episodes?" (GS-II/GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) & Inflation Targeting Direct: MPC sets repo rate in response to CPI data; statutory framework under RBI Act 2016
WPI vs CPI vs PPI Direct: India's first PPI released June 2026; understanding distinctions is a Prelims favourite
Oil & Gas Pricing Policy in India Direct: OMC pricing of petrol, diesel, LPG determines fuel inflation; subsidy vs deregulation debate
PAHAL / DBTL Scheme Connected: Direct Benefit Transfer for LPG subsidies; policy backstop for domestic LPG hikes
West Asia Conflict & India's Energy Security Geopolitical trigger for current inflation spike; India imports ~85% of crude
Food Inflation & Supply Chain Management Food inflation at 4.78%; horticulture price volatility, NAFED buffer stocks, e-NAM
Index Number Theory & Base Year Revision Static: UPSC tests understanding of Laspeyres, Paasche indices; base year changes
RBI's Instruments of Monetary Policy Repo rate, CRR, SLR, OMO — how RBI counters inflation; neutral vs accommodative vs hawkish

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. WPI vs CPI publisher confusion: WPI is published by DPIIT (Commerce Ministry), NOT MOSPI. CPI is published by MOSPI. Many aspirants conflate the two.

  2. Inflation targeting target: The target is 4% with a ±2% tolerance band (2%–6%), NOT simply "below 6%." The failure trigger is breaching the band for three consecutive quarters — not just once.

  3. CPI base year: The current CPI series uses base year 2024=100 (new, 2026 launch). The old series was 2012=100. Questions set before 2026 may cite 2012=100 — read the question date carefully.

  4. PPI ≠ WPI: India's PPI is new (2026); WPI has existed for decades. PPI typically excludes imports and focuses on domestic producer prices, whereas WPI includes traded goods. Do not treat them as synonyms.

  5. LPG categories: Domestic LPG and Commercial LPG (19 kg cylinder) are priced differently. The 75%+ hike since February 2026 refers to commercial LPG — conflating this with the domestic ₹29 hike (a much smaller revision) will lead to wrong MCQ choices.


11. Sources