Price pressures


Price Pressures in India — UPSC Study Note (Prelims + Mains)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
1956 CSO (now MoSPI) begins systematic CPI compilation
1974 High inflation crisis (around 28%) linked to first oil shock
1991 Economic liberalisation eases supply constraints but import price pass-through rises
2012 New CPI series (Base 2012=100) launched — pan-India, replacing four separate indices
2014 Urjit Patel Committee recommends Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework
2016 RBI Act amended (Section 45ZA–45ZI); FIT framework legislated; MPC constituted; 4% ± 2% target set
2020–21 COVID supply disruption pushed CPI above 6% for much of the year
2022–23 Russia-Ukraine war → energy & food price spike globally; India's CPI peaked at ~7.8% (April 2022)
2024–25 CPI moderated; base effects kept headline low (~3.6% average)
Jan 2026 New CPI series (Base 2024=100) released; food weight revised downward; second data release (Feb 2026) showed 3.21%

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Key Terms - CPI (Consumer Price Index): Measures retail price changes in a fixed basket of goods and services consumed by households. - WPI (Wholesale Price Index): Measures price changes at the producer/wholesale level; base year 2011-12. - Core Inflation: CPI excluding food and fuel — captures demand-driven price pressures. - Base Effect: When a high base-period price depresses current YoY inflation artificially (and vice versa). - El Niño: Periodic warming of Pacific sea surface temperatures, historically associated with weak/deficient South-West Monsoon in India → food price spikes.

Institutional Framework - Compiling Agency: Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation (MoSPI) — releases CPI data. [S2] - WPI Authority: Office of Economic Adviser, Ministry of Commerce & Industry. [S5] - Monetary Policy: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) — 6-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC); 3 RBI officials + 3 government nominees. - Legal Basis: RBI Act, 1934 — Sections 45ZA to 45ZI (inserted by Finance Act 2016).

New CPI Series (2024=100) Key Facts [S2][S4] - Base year: 2024 (old series: 2012) - Weight of Food & Beverages: 36.75% (reduced from ~45.86% in old series) - Rural weight: ~57.14%; Urban weight: ~42.86% (combined All-India) - Released from January 2026 — second data release was February 2026 data

Key Numbers (February 2026) [S2] - Headline CPI (All India): 3.21% (Provisional) - Rural CPI: 3.37% | Urban CPI: 3.02% - Food inflation: 3.47% | Housing: 2.12% - Food & Beverages sub-group inflation: 3.35% - Tomato inflation: >45% YoY - Onion price change: −28% | Potato: −18% [S4]

Key Numbers (May 2026) [S3] - Headline CPI: 3.93% | Food inflation: 4.78% - Silver jewellery inflation: ~155% | Tomato: ~48% - WPI (February 2026): Released per PIB [S5] - Repo rate (as of June 2026): 5.25%; within RBI's 2–6% tolerance band


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The new CPI series uses Base Year 2024=100; its first data release was for January 2026. [S2]
  2. Food & Beverages carry a weight of 36.75% in the new CPI series (reduced from ~45.86% in the 2012=100 series). [S2]
  3. India's headline CPI inflation for February 2026 was 3.21% (Provisional) — a 10-month high at the time of publication. [S2][S4]
  4. Rural CPI exceeded Urban CPI in February 2026: Rural 3.37% vs Urban 3.02%. [S2]
  5. Tomato price inflation exceeded 45% YoY in February 2026, while onions deflated by 28% and potatoes by 18%. [S4]
  6. The RBI's inflation target is 4% with ±2% tolerance band (i.e., 2–6%), legislated under RBI Act, 1934 (Sections 45ZA–45ZN), inserted by Finance Act 2016.
  7. The MPC has 6 members: 3 from RBI + 3 appointed by the Government of India; decisions by majority vote, RBI Governor has casting vote.
  8. WPI is compiled by the Office of Economic Adviser, Ministry of Commerce & Industry (not MoSPI). [S5]
  9. CPI is compiled and released by MoSPI (Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation). [S2]
  10. By May 2026, CPI rose to 3.93% — the fifth consecutive monthly increase since the new series launched. [S3]
  11. Silver jewellery inflation in May 2026 was approximately 155% — reflecting global geopolitical safe-haven demand. [S3]
  12. The RBI repo rate stood at 5.25% as of the June 2026 MPC meeting. [S3]
  13. Under Section 45ZN of the RBI Act, RBI must submit a written report to the government if inflation breaches the tolerance band for three consecutive quarters.
  14. The Price Stabilisation Fund (PSF) is administered by the Department of Consumer Affairs (not Agriculture Ministry).
  15. El Niño events historically cause below-normal South-West Monsoon in India, triggering food inflation — climate scientists projected its return mid-monsoon in 2026. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping | Paper | Syllabus Heading | |---|---| | GS-III | Indian Economy — Inflation, monetary policy, food security, agriculture | | GS-II | Government policies and interventions — RBI, price stabilisation mechanisms | | GS-I | Geography — Climate events (El Niño) and their socio-economic impact |

Plausible Mains Question Stems 1. "Examine how structural supply-side factors rather than demand-pull forces drive inflation in India. What policy tools are most effective in addressing each?" (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "The new CPI series (Base 2024=100) revises food weight downward. Critically analyse whether this change adequately captures inflationary burden on India's poor." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "El Niño, geopolitical conflicts, and energy transition gaps collectively threaten India's food price stability. Discuss with reference to recent trends and suggest a multi-pronged policy response." (GS-III/GS-I, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) Framework Core institutional mechanism through which India manages price pressures
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) & Repo Rate Direct policy response instrument to CPI deviations
Food Security & National Food Security Act, 2013 Structural link between food inflation and entitlement programmes
El Niño / La Niña & Indian Monsoon Primary climate driver of kharif crop outcomes and food prices
Fertiliser Policy & Urea Subsidies Energy price → fertiliser cost → food production cost chain
Price Stabilisation Fund (PSF) & Buffer Stocks Government's short-term price intervention architecture
WPI vs CPI — Divergence Analysis Frequently tested Prelims and Mains concept; their divergence signals demand-supply gaps
Essential Commodities Act, 1955 & 2020 Amendments Legal tool invoked during commodity price spikes

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong base year for new CPI: Aspirants may write 2012 (old series) instead of 2024 (new series launched January 2026) — examine questions may specify which series. [S2]
  2. WPI vs CPI compiling agency confusion: CPI → MoSPI; WPI → Office of Economic Adviser, Ministry of Commerce & Industry — frequently swapped in answers. [S2][S5]
  3. Food weight in CPI: Old series (~45.86%) vs new series (36.75%) — a trap in MCQs asking which series has higher food weight. [S2]
  4. MPC composition: A common error is stating all 6 members are from RBI — 3 are external members appointed by the Government.
  5. PSF administering ministry: Often confused with Ministry of Agriculture; it is administered by the Department of Consumer Affairs under the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution.
  6. Conflating El Niño impact: El Niño generally means weak monsoon and drought in India (not floods — La Niña is associated with excess rainfall in many regions). [S4]

11. Sources