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India’s retail inflation up 3.21% in February

Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) reported that India’s retail inflation, measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), rose to 3.21% in February.

This is the second reading under the new 2024 base year series, marking a 10-month high (though comparisons to the old 2012 series are not direct). The uptick from Januaryโ€™s 2.74% was primarily driven by a surge in food and precious metal prices, even as the impact of the Iran-Israel conflict has yet to fully hit the retail data.


Key Inflation Drivers (February 2026)

The “47-basis-point” jump from January was fueled by three specific areas:

  • The “Bullion Effect”: Geopolitical uncertainty sent gold and silver prices soaring. Silver jewellery inflation hit a staggering 160.8%, while gold/diamond jewellery stood at 48.2%.
  • Food Rebound: Food inflation (CFPI) quickened to 3.47% from 2.13% in January. While vegetables like Tomato (45.3%) and Cauliflower (43.8%) remained high year-on-year, they actually cooled by over 10% on a month-on-month basis.
  • Core Stability: Excluding food and energy, “core inflation” remained stable at around 3.4%, indicating that underlying demand-side pressure in sectors like health and communication is still benign.

Urban vs. Rural & Regional Splits

For the first time in several months, rural areas felt the pinch more sharply than cities.

CategoryFebruary 2026 InflationJanuary 2026 (Final)
Combined (Headline)3.21%2.74%
Rural3.37%2.73%
Urban3.02%2.75%
  • Regional Highs: Telangana recorded the highest inflation in the country at 5.02%, followed by Rajasthan (3.53%) and Kerala (3.50%).
  • Kitchen Deflation: Some staples offered relief; Garlic (-31.1%), Onion (-28.2%), and Potato (-18.5%) all remained in deep deflation compared to last year.

The “New Basket” Context

Under the revised 2024 series, the CPI basket has shifted to reflect modern Indian spending:

  • Food Weight: Reduced from 45.9% to 36.75%, making the headline number less sensitive to crop failures.
  • Services Weight: Increased for housing, transport, and communication. Notably, rural housing is now included for the first time.
  • Energy: LPG and electricity remained stable in February (0.14%), but economists warn that the recent โ‚น60 hike in LPG cylinders will only show up in the March report.

What This Means for Interest Rates

Despite the rise, inflation has remained below the RBI’s 4% medium-term target for 13 consecutive months. However, with crude oil flirting with $100โ€“$150 per barrel due to the West Asia war, the RBIโ€™s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is widely expected to keep the repo rate unchanged at 5.25% in April to wait for the “imported inflation” dust to settle.

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