"We believe it has much to do with the recovery in rural and
informal sector demand."
While rural demand was weak in the early part of last year,
wage growth, adjusted for inflation, has now surpassed
pre-pandemic levels, HSBC's research showed. Further, strong
sowing patterns in the winter season will also help incomes. The
informal sector, closely linked to the rural economy, is seeing
a revival in step.
The economists pointed out the implications of rising rural
incomes for inflation, saying "already, there is pressure on
food inflation, particularly across cereal and milk."
"As we await the winter crop, due in March/April, food
prices will likely remain elevated," they added.
Producers will use the strong demand conditions to restore margins, raising the risk of inflation staying higher, the economists said.
"Even if the winter crop is good, the rural demand it stokes will come in the way of disinflation as producers continue to restore margins, pressuring core inflation," they said. "And, if the winter crop is weak due to last-minute weather disruptions, food inflation could remain high, even if rural incomes and core inflation fall." With inflation seen at an average of 5.4% in 2023/24, HSBC expects the central bank to raise the policy rate by another 25 basis points from the current 6.5% level.
However, they expect the bank to cut rates before the end of the next financial year as growth slows to 5.5% from 7% this year in a weak global economy. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Retail inflation rises above upper tolerance limit Retail inflation rises above upper tolerance limit India inflation in cereals category soars ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Ira Dugal; Editing by Dhanya Ann Thoppil)