| Relevance: GS Paper III (Economy — Inflation, Monetary Policy, RBI) | Source: MoSPI CPI release, May 2026 data |
1 · What happened
| India’s retail inflation rose to 3.93% in May 2026, up from 3.48% in April — the fastest pace in over a year. Inflation had fallen to very low levels in late 2025, but has been climbing back since.
At 3.93%, prices are now rising just a touch below the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) target of 4%. The rise is not because Indians are suddenly spending more; it is driven mainly by a statistical “base effect,” rising food prices, and the West Asia war pushing up global fuel and shipping costs. Importantly, the rate is still well inside the RBI’s comfort range of 2% to 6%. |
2 · The Story in Simple Words
| First, what is “inflation,” and how is it measured? Inflation is simply how fast prices rise over a year. To track the prices ordinary families pay, India uses the Consumer Price Index (CPI) — a fixed “shopping basket” of everyday goods and services. (This is the retail price level. A separate index, the WPI — Wholesale Price Index, tracks prices at the wholesale stage.) The RBI watches the CPI closely, because its job is to keep prices stable. |
| Below 2% lower limit — too low |
RBI COMFORT BAND : 2% – 6% Target = 4% | May 2026 = 3.93% (rising) |
Above 6% upper limit — too high |
India sits inside the band, close to the 4% target — comfortable for now, but the upward drift is being watched.
| One idea you must know — the “base effect”. Inflation is always measured against the same month last year. If prices last year were unusually low, then even a small rise this year shows up as a big percentage jump — not because things suddenly got costly, but because the comparison base was low. Much of the current rise is this kind of arithmetic, not a real demand boom. |
- Why prices are rising now: the base effect, costlier food, and the West Asia war — which raises the price of crude oil, ship insurance and freight, and slowly feeds into fuel and transport costs at home.
- The RBI’s rulebook — Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT): under the RBI Act, 1934 (as amended), the government, in consultation with the RBI, fixes the inflation target at 4%, with a 2%–6% band. If inflation stays outside this band for three quarters in a row, the RBI must explain to the government and suggest fixes.
- Who decides interest rates — the MPC: the Monetary Policy Committee is a six-member body headed by the RBI Governor. It sets the repo rate (the rate at which the RBI lends to banks). With inflation drifting up, the MPC is likely to stay cautious about cutting rates.
- A big 2026 change — new CPI basket: MoSPI moved the CPI base year from 2012 to 2024 (using the Household Consumption Expenditure Survey 2023-24). The weight of “food & beverages” fell from 45.86% to 36.75%, and the basket now even tracks e-commerce and OTT prices. Effect: a food-price shock now moves the headline number a little less than before.
- Way ahead: interest rates alone cannot fix “cost-push” inflation caused by wars or crop failures. The government must add supply-side steps — release buffer stocks, diversify crude oil sources, and build cold-storage to cut food wastage.
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to inflation management in India, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only
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