India inflation likely rose to 4% in May as food, fuel costs climb: Reuters poll

A vegetable vendor, speaks on his mobile phone at a retail market area in Kolkata, India. (Photo: Reuters)

BENGALURU, June 8 (Reuters) – India’s inflation likely rose ​to the Reserve Bank of India’s medium-term target of 4% in May, driven by a pickup in ‌vegetable prices and higher fuel costs following the U.S. and Israel war against Iran, a Reuters poll of economists showed.

Inflation has remained below the RBI’s 4% target for 15 consecutive months. But that benign trend is unlikely to continue, with state-owned fuel retailers raising fuel prices four times in May ​alone, pushing up transport costs, while food inflation continued to rise from last year’s low levels.

But, with inflation ​still within target and economic growth remaining robust, the central bank kept key interest rates unchanged last week, ⁠as expected. RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra said underlying inflation pressures remained benign, although second-round effects warranted vigilance.

VEGETABLES AND TRANSPORT DRIVE ​INFLATION RISE

The June 3-8 poll of 38 economists forecast inflation, measured by the annual change in the consumer price index (CPI), rose ​to 4.0% in May from 3.48% in April.

“May ’26 CPI likely crossed the 4% threshold … driven primarily by vegetables and transport inflation,” said Kanika Pasricha, chief economic adviser at Union Bank of India.

“Persistence of elevated temperatures across several regions and war-led constraints have adversely impacted the supply of commodities. ​Vegetable prices have rebounded in the ongoing summer months, coupled with the severe heatwave, all segments of food inflation likely ​clocked positive month-on-month momentum.”

Union Bank of India estimated transport inflation likely jumped to 4.15% in May from -0.01% in April, lifting its contribution to ‌headline inflation ⁠to 36 basis points from nearly zero, reflecting the pass-through of higher fuel prices.

RISING WHOLESALE PRICES GRADUALLY FEED THROUGH

While headline inflation in April came in well below expectations, wholesale price inflation accelerated to a 3-1/2-year high of 8.3%. The survey showed wholesale inflation likely rose further to 9.05% in May. Economists expect those higher input costs to gradually feed through to consumer prices.

The central ​bank raised its inflation forecasts ​to 5.1% for this fiscal ⁠year, up from its earlier estimate of 4.6%.

“The impact of the war should start showing up (in) the May print,” said Sakshi Gupta, principal economist at HDFC Bank, who added the pass-through ​from wholesale to consumer prices typically works with a lag.

“So far, inflation numbers have come ​in lower than ⁠expected because I think there was very limited pass-through and also lower gold prices were kind of pushing down the inflation print.”

India’s relatively subdued inflation has also been supported by softer-than-usual food price increases. However, economists warn that the tailwind may be fading as ⁠rising temperatures ​begin to push up vegetable prices.

The India Meteorological Department has warned this ​year’s monsoon could be the weakest in 11 years.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and fuel prices, is expected at 3.80% in May. India does not publish ​official core inflation data.