Fears are for real

Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI: The Government may be technically correct in saying India is not yet facing an inflation crisis. At the retail level, inflation remains within the Reserve Bank of India’s comfort zone, foodgrain stocks are healthy and the country’s macroeconomic fundamentals are far stronger than during previous oil shocks. Yet, the recent surge in petrol and diesel prices should serve as a warning against complacency.

Fuel inflation is quite unlike many other forms of price rise. It does not remain confined to petrol pumps. In an economy as transport-dependent as India’s, higher fuel prices quickly seep into logistics, agriculture, manufacturing and retail markets.

Diesel, in particular, powers the arteries of India’s economy — trucks, supply chains, farm equipment and industrial transport systems. Once diesel prices rise repeatedly, inflationary pressures begin spreading quietly but steadily across a range of sectors.

The impact on business and industry deserves particular attention. Rising logistics and energy costs can squeeze profit margins, delay investment decisions and weaken competitiveness, especially for export-oriented sectors already facing uncertain global demand. Small and medium enterprises, which operate on limited margins, are especially vulnerable. Many may eventually be forced to either raise prices or reduce hiring and expansion plans.
The Government’s challenge is complicated because fuel taxes remain a major source of revenue for both the Centre and states. Yet excessive dependence on fuel taxation during periods of global crude volatility can become economically counterproductive.

Higher transportation and production costs eventually feed into broader inflation, reducing consumer purchasing power and slowing demand across the economy.

The Finance Minister’s emphasis on the ‘3Fs’— fuel, fertiliser and forex — itself suggests that policymakers recognise the seriousness of emerging external pressures. The concern is not merely today’s inflation number, but what prolonged oil shocks could do to growth, consumption and business confidence over time.

India may not yet be in an inflation emergency. But inflation often becomes dangerous precisely when governments and markets convince themselves that the risks remain distant.

India may not yet be in an inflation emergency. But inflation often becomes dangerous precisely when governments and markets convince themselves that the risks remain distant as prolonged oil shocks could hit growth, consumption and business confidence over time.

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