India’s cbank tightens monetary policy more than expected

July 27 (Reuters) – India’s central bank raised interest rates more forcefully than expected on Tuesday in the face of inflation that has held stubbornly above 10 percent for the past five months.

The RBI lifted the repo rate, at which it lends to banks, by 25 basis points to 5.75 percent, which was in line with expectations, but raised the reverse repo rate, at which it absorbs excess cash from the system, by 50 basis points to 4.50 percent.

Economists and investors had expected a 25 basis point increase in the reverse repo rate.

As expected, it left the cash reserve ratio (CRR) for banks at 6.00 percent, amid ongoing tight liquidity in the banking system.

Inflation in India emerged last year in the wake of a poor monsoon that drove up food prices but has spread broadly throughout the economy, spawning protest against a government whose voter base is predominantly poor and rural.

New Delhi’s decision to increase fuel prices is expected to add nearly a percentage point to wholesale price index (WPI) inflation starting in July and led the opposition to call a one-day nationwide strike early this month.

The government is counting on normal summer monsoon rains to results in better crop yields and ease pressure on food prices, and has said inflation should decline to 6 percent by December, a figure private economists put closer to 8 percent. (Reporting by Tony Munroe)

India’s food price index up 16.90 pct y/y – govt

June 24 (Reuters) – India’s food price index rose 16.90 percent in the year to June 12, while the fuel price index climbed 13.18 percent, government data released on Thursday showed.

The pace of increase in food prices quickened from the previous week’s annual rise of 16.12 percent, while fuel price inflation remained steady.

The primary articles index was up at 17.60 percent. Wholesale price index INWPI=ECI, the most closely watched inflation gauge in India, rose 10.16 percent in May from a year earlier. (Reporting by Abhijit Neogy and Matthias Williams; editing by Malini Menon)

India’s food price index up 16.12 pct y/y – govt

June 17 (Reuters) – India’s food price index rose 16.12 percent in the year to June 5, while the fuel price index climbed 13.18 percent, government data released on Thursday showed.

The pace of increase in food prices slowed from the previous week’s annual rise of 16.74 percent, while fuel price inflation eased from the previous week’s 14.23 percent.

The primary articles index was up at 16.86 percent.

Wholesale prices INWPI=ECI, the most closely watched inflation gauge in India, rose 10.16 percent in May from a year earlier. (Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; editing by Malini Menon)

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June 16 (Reuters) – India’s food inflation could rise in the next two weeks, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, told reporters on Wednesday.

Food prices rose an annual 16.74 percent in end May, adding upward pressure on headline inflation INWPI=ECI. (Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; editing by Malini Menon)

Monsoon makes no headway in 6 days – govt

India’s annual monsoon, which is vital for farm and economic growth, has not advanced for the past six days after bringing rains to a far-flung island three days ahead of normal, weather officials said on Thursday.

Monsoon winds were weak, and may need up to two days to strengthen, D. Sivananda Pai, director of the National Climate Center in Pune, told Reuters over phone.

India Meteorological Department has forecast the June-September monsoon would hit the mainland on May 30 in Kerala.

“It is already raining in Kerala but we are waiting for certain characteristics of monsoon,” Pai said.

The rains reached the Andaman and Nicobar Islands on May 17, two days ahead of schedule, before moving to many parts of the Bay of Bengal in the following week.

The progress has not been swift since then due to last week’s cyclone Laila on India’s east coast.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government is banking heavily on monsoon rains, which irrigate 60 percent of the country’s farms, to calm food prices that soared after last year’s driest season in nearly four decades.

The government, which was voted back to power by a bigger mandate from the rural poor last year, is facing severe criticism due to high prices, especially of food. (Reporting by Mayank Bhardwaj; Editing by Ranjit Gangadharan)

RBI to come out with a report on food inflation

Kolkata, May 11 (ANI): Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn said the bank would come out with a report on food inflation in a few weeks time.

Talking to reporters here, Gokarn said that the paper would study the impact of monsoon on the food price rise and whether the rise in excessive demand for sugar, milk and pulses indicated a shift in the nutritional choices of the people.

He also said a good monsoon should augur well for the food prices.

“I have no control over the monsoons, I have no idea as to how the monsoon process will play out. We are getting initial forecast of the monsoons being normal but ultimately the process, the path of the food prices in the short term over the next few months will depend significantly how good the monsoons are,” he said.

“So, if we have a normal monsoon across the country we should see the food prices started to come down over the course of the next few months,” he added.

According to the government data, India”s annual food inflation hovered around 16.04 percent for the week ended April 24.

Inflation is spreading to non -food manufactured items, which may keep pressure on overall inflation. Last month, RBI tightened its monetary policy with a view to arresting food inflation from spreading to other sectors.

Last year, the government”s forecast of a normal monsoon proved wrong and the country grappled instead with a baking drought caused by its driest monsoon in 37 years.

Good rainfall would help India”s farm output rebound after last year”s drought, which triggered a sustained rise in inflation that boosted food prices 17.7 percent in the 12 months to April 10, and fuel prices by 12.5 percent. (ANI)

Mortgage stress rising along with rates

There are fears the Reserve Bank’s rapid succession of interest rate rises will lead to more young Australians being crippled by mortgage stress.

Yesterday the Reserve Bank (RBA) moved rates up 0.25 percentage points to 4.5 per cent – the sixth increase in eight months.

The rises come on the back of record low interest rates during the global financial crisis.

Aussie Home Loans chief John Symond says many people have been unprepared for the recent spate of rate rises.

“That’s the unfortunate downside in borrowing money, particularly at a cycle where we were having interest rates at historic lows and now very rapidly interest rates have been increased by the Reserve Bank,” he said.

“Six increases in the past seven meetings is very rapid and it’s probably faster than the RBA or banks expected interest rates to rise and it certainly caught a lot of borrowers unawares.

“There’s a lot of pain out there at the moment and the conception of the consumers is that these rates – if they go up further and they probably will – we could end up in trouble.”

Mr Symond is certain borrowers will start to default on their mortgages.

“I’ve got no doubt because credit was pretty free and easy. A lot of those borrowers had not put in a lot of deposit so they are exposed to a lot of borrowings and they’re now feeling the pinch in having to find an extra $100 a week out of their pay packet,” he said.

“That’s a lot for an average family when food prices have been going up, petrol prices have been going up.

“Historically when interest rates go up you have more people struggling, more people defaulting and more people being forced to sell their homes.”

‘Over-exaggeration’

But the Mortgage and Finance Association of Australia’s chief executive, Phil Naylor, says most buyers should be prepared for the rises.

“It might impact on people who are operating very much at the margin, but our research shows that 80 per cent of respondents in our last survey said they are easily making their repayments on their home loans and that was compared to only 67 per cent a year ago,” he said.

“It’s probably a bit of an over-exaggeration to say that there are large numbers out there suffering from mortgage stress, but the potential is that if interest rates do continue to rise, those figures may not be as rosy down the line.”

He says most lenders would have been more responsible in recent years when giving out home loans.

“If [borrowers] did take a loan out in the last two years, lenders in the last two years have been much tighter about their lending criteria,” he said.

“I’m pretty certain that all major lenders and other lenders as well would have put in a factor of at least 1.5 to 2 per cent as a buffer so that in other words they wouldn’t have lent them money two years ago if they thought the borrower couldn’t continue to service the loan if rates were 1.5 to 2 per cent higher.”

‘Too fast, too soon’

But Mr Symond says he thinks RBA governor Glenn Stevens pushed rates up too fast too soon.

“The Reserve Bank governor consistently says gradual increases are necessary, but that gradual was thrown out the window and they’ve consistently upped them. Six increases out of seven meetings isn’t my definition of gradual,” he said.

Mr Symond says hopefully the RBA will put the brakes on further increases in the coming months.

But he says more rate rises are inevitable.

“They are now going to become very hawkish and concentrate on inflation and if our inflation numbers trend up, interest rates will continue to trend up and hopefully we’ll have a couple of months without further increases, but you should factor in at least another two or three 25 basis point increases later this year,” he said.

Meanwhile, both Mr Symond and Mr Naylor say borrowers who are worried about defaulting on their mortgage should speak to their lenders.

“Those people who feel they are really getting close to getting into trouble, don’t wait to get into trouble,” Mr Symond said.

“Put your hand up, contact your lender. The last thing the bank or any lender wants to do is see a customer default and at worst lose their home.

“The sooner you can go in and talk with the lender, explain the circumstances, the better the chance to reconfigure the loan, to renegotiate, to give you the best chance to make sure you get through this.”

Food inflation to decline in coming months: Mukherjee

New Delhi, Apr 29 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has said that despite the country being worried about high inflation, there are indications of a cooling off in high food prices that have been driving it.

“What is the most worrisome feature of the economy is the inflation, which agitates the entire house and the people outside the house. I share the concern of honourable members,” said Mukherjee, while speaking in the Lok Sabha on Wednesday.

Mukherjee mentioned that the inflation would ease in the next few months on indications of a good monsoon.

“Indications of softening of the food inflation are clearly visible. There has been a significant decline from the peak food inflation of over 20 percent recorded in December 2009 to 17.7 percent in March 2010,” said Mukherjee.

“The inflation in essential commodities also declined from the peak 23.8 percent in January 2010 to 19.8 percent in March 2010, it is expected that the decline would continue in the recent (sic) months uninterruptedly,” he added.

Mukherjee further said the recent moves by the country”s central bank – the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to tighten monetary policy should anchor inflationary expectations, adding that the buoyed by predictions of normal monsoon and better economic conditions, the economy is expected to reach 9 percent mark by 2011-2012.

“Going by these indications and considerations that agriculture has a set back in 2009-2010. Indian economy is expected to go around 8.5 percent during 2010-2011 and to reach 9 percent mark in 2011-2012,” said Mukherjee.

Annual wholesale price inflation in March touched a 17-month high of 9.90 percent, prompting the RBI to raise rates in April, its second such move in as many months. (ANI)

IMD forecasts normal monsoon rains in 2010

India’s summer monsoon is likely to be normal this year, the government said on Friday, allaying fears over an event crucial to the economic fate of the world’s second- most populous nation.

Rainfall is likely to be 98 percent of the long-term average, said the weather office, whose forecast is closely watched by commodities and financial markets as well as the government, which is battling to rein in inflation against a backdrop of intense protests over rising food prices.

“Rainfall for the country as a whole is is likely to be normal,” B.P. Yadav, spokesman for the India Meteorological Office, told reporters, adding that the forecast model had an error margin of 5 percent.

He said the El Nino phenomenon, which disrupts normal weather patterns, was weakening.

The monsoon winds bring 75 to 90 percent of the rainfall in most parts of India, the world’s top edible oils importer and biggest sugar consumer, and are vital for cane, rice and oilseeds crops as 60 percent of cultivated areas depend entirely on the rains for irrigation.

Last year, the government’s forecast of a normal monsoon proved wrong and the country grappled instead with a baking drought caused by its driest monsoon in 37 years.

For a graphic on India’s monsoon forecast vs actual rain see http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/10/04/IN_MSNFCT0410.gif

For a graphic on the link between India’s rice output monsoon, see http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/10/04/IN_MSONRC0410.gif

For a graphic on rainfall in years following a drought, see http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/10/04/IN_DRGHT0410.gif

India’s coalition government, led by the Congress party of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, cannot afford another poor season that would further fuel food inflation, spur additional interest rate hikes and trim economic growth.

Good rainfall would help India’s farm output rebound after last year’s drought, which triggered a sustained rise in inflation that boosted food prices 17.7 percent in the 12 months to April 10, and fuel prices by 12.5 percent.

(Reporting by Ratnajyoti Dutta; editing by Himani Sarkar and Malini Menon)

FACTBOX – Key political risks to watch in India

Thu, Apr 1 07:57 PM

Investors who had bet on swift economic reforms in India following the strong mandate won by the Congress-led government in elections last year have been disappointed — the government has been wary of pushing through controversial measures, and is now struggling with rising inflation and a weaker position in parliament.

Following is a summary of key risks to watch:

* INFLATION, AND MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY

Inflation, and in particular spiralling food prices, presents a key challenge for the government, which has struggled to find a solution. In a surprise offcycle move on March 19, the Reserve Bank of India raised key rates by 25 basis points for the first time since it began cutting in 2008.

Rising demand-side pressure, which has begun to push up headline inflation to near 10 percent, means a further rate increase is likely at the next central bank policy review on April 20. Analysts expect a 25 basis points hike, but the central bank’s recent comments on inflationary pressures were hawkish and if the hike is larger, it may hit bonds and stocks. The RBI is less likely to increase banks’ cash reserve ratio.

The government plans to borrow a record 4.57 trillion rupees in 2010/11, 1.3 percent more than the previous year, to fund a fiscal deficit projected at 5.5 percent of GDP. To help fund this it plans bond sales of 2.87 trillion rupees ($64 billion), 63 percent of its record full-year issuance target, in the first half of the new fiscal year.

What to watch:

– Price stability is crucial for economic growth to benefit the broader population. If inflation does not moderate as expected, it could lead to aggressive monetary action which could impact growth and spark political protests.

– Comments by key government and central bank officials on the timing and scale of rate rises. Persistent policy uncertainty and inflation concerns would weigh on debt prices.

– If food prices continue to stoke social discontent, the government may feel less inclined to push ahead with economic reforms, with a broadly negative impact on Indian markets.

– With most developed countries still operating at near-zero percent rate levels, high interest rate in emerging economies provide arbitrage opportunities.

– Bank credit, which is at 15.8 percent, is still far from picking up, so a full-throttle charge to a higher rate regime could pose greater problems for credit growth.

– The volume of government borrowing may exert pressure on bond yields, and the central bank has said managing the government’s debt programme this year will be a challenge. The bank may not buy back as many bonds as it did last year, as it does not want to increase liquidity when inflationary pressures are mounting. The RBI is also constrained by the fact that it has nearly exhausted its stock of Market Stabilisation Scheme bonds which are used to absorb liquidity from the markets.

* ECONOMIC REFORM

While the government had appeared to be in a strong position to press forward with an ambitious economic reform agenda after last year’s wider-than-expected election victory, progress has been much slower than some investors had hoped. The government has made headway in some areas: it has pledged to reform tax laws, disinvest in some 60 state-run firms and formed an experts panel to ease foreign investment in the financial sector — steps markets would regard positively.

But it has repeatedly backtracked after street protests — such as over labour reforms and freeing up farm prices — raising doubts about firm governance needed to implement reform.

The government’s ability to push through key legislation, including financial reforms measures, will be tested when parliament reconvenes from April 15. Its parliamentary majority has narrowed after two of its partners withdrew support because of differences over bills reserving parliamentary seats for women and underwriting liability from nuclear accidents.

What to watch:

– Announcements on moves to privatise some state firms, relax restrictions on foreign direct investment, ease limits on foreign banks, and reform labour laws. The government’s plans to open up insurance and pensions to foreign firms are now in doubt.

– Important reforms such as stake sales in state firms could be hampered if adverse political or global economic developments spark volatility in domestic markets. The government plans to raise 400 billion rupees from stake sales to cut its deficit.

– The failure to move on the nuclear bill has prevented U.S. nuclear firms from accessing India’s estimated $150 billion nuclear power market and frustrated Washington.

* EXTERNAL SECURITY

With India and Pakistan holding their first official talks since the 2008 Mumbai attacks, hopes have risen of a calibrated reduction in tensions, despite a bombing in the western Indian city of Pune and an attack on Indians in Afghanistan. India has so far refrained from pointing a finger of blame towards Pakistan. But relations remain fraught and another major attack in India could severely test India’s patience and put the Indian government under tremendous pressure to stop its tentative dialogue with Pakistan.

The two countries are also jockeying for influence in Afghanistan, preparing for any political vacuum from a U.S. exit. This could further worsen their relations.

Military conflict remains only a very slim possibility. But a limited confrontation cannot be ruled out if Pakistan-based militants once again launch a major attack on Indian soil, making India-Pakistan conflict an unpredictable risk. And Pakistan’s weak government, under threat on several fronts, may have its own reasons to focus popular anger on India.

In comparison, ties between India and China, which remained uneasy throughout 2009 amid reports of border incursions and an occasional war of words, are witnessing a period of calm.

What to watch:

– Signs of further thaw in India-Pakistan ties and progress on more substantive talks. Any sign of rapprochement would be greeted positively by investors, but would not have a significant short-term market impact.

* INTERNAL SECURITY

The risk of violent attacks by domestic insurgent groups or foreign militants remains high, underlined by the recent Pune bombing that killed 16 people. Al Qaeda and affiliated groups see India as a key battleground, and Pakistan is likely to remain a haven for militants seeking to launch attacks in India. Security forces are also battling a Maoist insurgency spreading across large swathes of countryside, much of it rich in minerals.

What to watch:

– The danger of new attacks. Investors have priced in the threat level in India, as the muted market reaction to the Mumbai attacks showed, but attacks causing a serious deterioration in relations with Pakistan would be market-negative.

(Additional reporting by Abhijit Neogy; Editing by Andrew Marshall)
Krittivas Mukherjee

EU report signals U-turn on biofuels target

The European Union appears to be backtracking on its biofuels policy with a new study showing that more than 5.6 percent of biofuel in road fuels can damage the environment.

EU leaders agreed in 2008 that 10 percent of transport fuels should come from renewable sources by 2020 — mostly biofuels as electric cars would still be in their infancy.

But environmentalists criticised the target, saying it would affect the way land is used around the world, forcing up food prices and encouraging deforestation.

The EU’s most comprehensive biofuels modelling exercise yet was made public on Thursday, but is based on having just 5.6 percent of biofuel in road fuels.

Experts say the 10 percent figure was shaved to 5.6 percent partly by exaggerating the contribution of electric cars in 2020, forecasting they will represent 20 percent of new car sales. That figure is between two and six times the car industry’s own estimate.

They also say the study exaggerates to around 45 percent the contribution of bioethanol — the greenest of all biofuels — and consequently downplays the worst impacts of biodiesel.

Bioethanol’s contribution is around 19 percent today.

But it was not clear if the Commission had intentionally given unrealistic data to the consultancy that handled the project, or whether it was preparing for a policy change.

“The 5.6 percent figure is not based on an honest reflection of reality, or else the Commission is preparing to backtrack on its target,” one EU official said.

POLICY REVIEW

At the centre of the debate is an issue dryly referred to as “indirect land use change”, which has put palm oil producers in Malaysia and Indonesia in the cross-hairs of environmentalists.

Critics say that regardless of where they are grown, biofuels compete for land with food crops, forcing farmers worldwide to expand into areas never farmed before — sometimes by hacking into tropical rainforest or draining peatlands.

Burning forests and draining wetlands can pump vast quantities of climate-warming emissions into the atmosphere, cancelling out any theoretical climate benefit from the fuel.

But the study found the effects were not significant until EU biofuel use reached a certain point.

“Indirect land use change effects do indeed offset part of the emission benefits, but are not a threat at the currently estimated volume of 5.6 percent of road transport fuels required,” a European Commission statement said.

The report said that if the amount of biofuels were raised above 5.6 percent, “there is a real risk that indirect land use change could undermine the environmental viability of biofuels”.

“The EU is gambling with the future of tropical forests and with climate-damaging greenhouse gases,” said campaigner Adrian Bebb of Friends of the Earth Europe. “This demands an urgent review of EU biofuels policy.”

Vegetable oils can be used in biodiesel, which has led to worries of increasing food prices as food crops get diverted to feed Europe’s growing car fleet. But the study found little impact at 5.6 percent.

“The effect of EU biofuels policies on food prices will remain very limited, with a maximum price change on the food bundle of plus 0.5 percent in Brazil and plus 0.14 percent in Europe,” it said.

This finding contradicts other studies by the Commission, which showed that EU biofuel targets could raise the price of cereals and vegetable oils by 10 percent and 35 percent respectively, creating food shortages in the developing world.

The European Biodiesel Board said its members faced tougher scrutiny than other vegetable oil buyers in the food industry, power generation or oleochemicals.

“Once this directive is in place, EU biofuels will be the most monitored and scrutinised product in the world,” said secretary general Raffaello Garofalo.

(Reporting by Pete Harrison, editing by Dale Hudson and Anthony Barker)

EGoM clears draft Food Security Bill

New Delhi, Mar 19 (ANI): Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar has said the Empowered Group of Ministers (EGoM) has cleared the draft of the Food Security Bill.

The Bill will enable every person Below the Poverty Line (BPL) to receive 25 kilograms of wheat or rice per month at the rate of Rupees three or 0.065 per kilogram.

“EGoM has no authority to take a final view on the (Food Security) Bill. Ultimately, the Bill will be decided and approved by the cabinet, that”s why EGoM decided that I should take this bill for proposal to the cabinet,” Pawar told reporters here on Thursday.

Asia”s third-largest economy is recovering, with factory output surging, but food prices are growing at the fastest pace in 11 years and the government fears a backlash from millions of rural poor who are its main voters.

Rising prices have sparked opposition-backed street protests and left the government little elbowroom to push through financial reforms such as easing fuel price controls. (ANI)

Protestors block roads in Kolkata over price rise

Kolkata, Mar 16 (ANI): Socialist Unity Centre of India (SUCI) activists blocked roads in Kolkata on Monday as a mark their mass protest against the rising prices of essential commodities.

Holding banners, placards and party flags, the activists of SUCI raised slogans against the price rise in the country and also stalled vehicular traffic for over half-n-hour.
“It is against price rise and for example, high oil price, petrol, diesel hike including 12 demands, twelve number of demands,” said Shyamal Guha Majumdar, a member of SUCI staging the protest.

The high inflation was mainly due to the continued rise in food prices, which climbed 17.8 percent from a year earlier in February.

Annual wholesale price inflation accelerated to 9.89 percent in February, the highest since October 2008 and well above the Reserve Bank of India”s end-March projection of 8.5 percent and the 8.56 percent January reading.

The inflation data comes on the heels of a 16.7 percent annual jump in industrial output in January, with the unexpectedly strong economic pickup also backing the case for the central bank to raise policy rates by at least 25 basis points. (ANI)

Inflationary pressure on food items coming down: Mukherjee

New Delhi, Mar 16 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has said that inflationary pressure on food items has started coming down.

Talking to reporters here on the sidelines of a function on Monday, Mukherjee said: “I am afraid that we shall have to deal with it for some time more but inflationary pressure on the food items have started coming down slowly.”

The high inflation was mainly due to the continued rise in food prices, which climbed 17.8 percent in February from a year earlier.

Rising prices have sparked opposition-backed street protests and made government reluctant to push through reforms such as relaxing fuel and farm price controls, even though the ruling Congress party faces no risk of losing power anytime soon.

Annual wholesale price inflation accelerated to 9.89 percent in February, the highest since October 2008 and well above the Reserve Bank of India”s end-March projection of 8.5 percent and the 8.56 percent January reading. (ANI)

Polish CPI seen at about 2.5 pct in March-official

WARSAW, March 1 (Reuters) – Polish inflation may ease to about 2.5 percent year-on-year in March, a finance ministry official said on Monday.

“Inflation will continue to ease, also thanks to the statistical base effect and stable food prices, and near the central bank’s 2.5 percent target in March,” Slawomir Dudek, deputy director of the statistics and analysis department, said.

Earlier on Monday, the ministry estimated February inflation would ease to 3.0 percent from 3.6 percent in January. (Reporting by Pawel Sobczak, writing by Karolina Slowikowska; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Sharad Pawar says end of season rains will help winter crops

New Delhi, Sep 18 (ANI): Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar has said that late end-season rains will help India’s winter crops.

Talking to reporters here on Thursday, Pawar said, “It’s true that because paddy area transplantation has been dropped, but the late rains are very helpful particularly for Punjab, Haryana, Orissa and Chhattisgarh.”

“There would not be any pressure on food grains supply, as the stock position was good,” Pawar added.

Meteorological Department has said that since June 1, monsoon rains have been 20 percent below normal and heavy showers in the past week have reduced the total seasonal deficit by three percentage points.

Met department said the country can expect heavy rains for at least another week, but the withdrawal of the monsoon, which usually begins to wind down in early September, would be delayed.

A surge in food prices unexpectedly pushed the annual change in India’s wholesale price index into positive for the first time since late May, putting pressure on the central bank to bring forward an exit from its easy monetary policy.

The annualised wholesale price index rose by an unexpected 0.12 percent in the year to September 5, compared with the previous week’s 0.12 percent fall and analysts’ forecast of a 0.08 percent decline.

The food articles sub-index rose an annual 15.4 percent, up from the previous week’s 14.8 percent rise, as a dry spell hit nearly half of India’s districts, hurting summer crops and prompting the government to take steps to raise supplies. (ANI)

Planning Commission meets today

New Delhi, Sep 1 (ANI): The full Planning Commission will meet here on Tuesday to take stock of the economic situation in the country.

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh will chair the meeting to be attended by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar and other Cabinet ministers, besides Commission’s Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia.

The meeting will primarily discuss issues relating to drought, food prices and energy.

It will be a mid-term appraisal of the 11th Five-Year Plan where the growth targets will be announced. The meet is also expected to review the Integrated Energy Policy (IEP), which was approved by the Cabinet last December.

The Commission is also expected to discuss allocations under various government welfare schemes.

The Planning Commission’s meeting comes a day after the country’s top economic minds agreed that India’s economy is looking up after the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) showed a 6.1 per cent growth.

India witnessed a 7.8 percent economic expansion during the corresponding period of the last fiscal.

According to sources, mining and electricity in industrial sector, and financing among services sector posted higher growth of 7.9, 6.2 and 8.1 percent, respectively, in the first quarter of this fiscal, against 4.6, 2.7 and 6.9 percent a year ago.

Infrastructure development and community services also managed to register a growth of 7.1 and 6.8 percent against 8.4 and 8.2 percent, in the last fiscal.

However, agriculture and manufacturing industry expanded at a slower rate of 2.4 and 3.4 percent respectively. (ANI)

Kolkatans worried over rise in prices of vegetables, fish

Kolkata, Aug 28 (ANI): People of Kolkata are a worried lot as prices of vegetables and fish have increased in the city.

The vegetable vendors are selling potatoes at the rate of Rs.18 per kg which were earlier being sold at Rs.6. Earlier, prices of tomatoes were Rs.20 per kg but now they are being sold at Rs.30 per kg. The prices of other vegetables have also increased.

Vegetable sellers say that less production of vegetables have increased the price this year.

“The prices of vegetables were low earlier. But now the prices are increasing because of less production. There is a gap between supply and demand,” said Sahadeb Poira, a vegetable seller.

Residents say that prices of vegetables are becoming unaffordable for them.

“Here if I go to market for potatoes I have to pay 18 rupees more than that. And say now when you—-purchase 5 rupees or 6 rupees per kg now its three times therefore we can’t afford it,” said RN Chakraborty, a resident of Kolkata.

The prices of food grain, sugar and other items of daily needs have created an explosive situation in India because of weak monsoon and drought like situation.

Food prices surged an annual 13.3 percent in mid-August even as the overall wholesale price index fell, and the impact of a poor monsoon on inflation and the economy could prompt further government relief steps.

The prices of ‘Hilsa’ fish have also increased in the region. Sayeed Anwar Maqsood, secretary, Fish Importers Association says that prices have increased because of less procurement from neighbouring Bangladesh.

“The prices of Hilsa fish have gone up because of the fact there is a scarcity in the market. We fish importer association used to bring every year more than 5,000 metric ton of Hilsa fish. But then we are not able to bring fish this year from Bangladesh. The major reason is because fish availability in Bangladesh itself is very little,” said Maqsood.

Hilsa prices in Kolkata, as a result, have shot up substantially from 100-120 rupees (2.3- 2.7 US Dollars) a kilogram to 350-400 rupees (8.15- 9.31 US Dollars), putting the fish out of reach of middle class Bengalis. (ANI)

Reserve Bank of India predicts six per cent GDP

New Delhi, Aug 28 (ANI): The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has predicted six per cent growth in Real Gross Domestic Product in the current fiscal despite a weak monsoon.

In its annual report, the RBI said economic impact of the drought would not be bad.

The poor rain will push up food prices in the short term, and will also put pressure on the government to raise expenditure on subsidies and other relief measures. (ANI)

Sugarcane farming to be discouraged in Surat

Bardoli (Gujarat), Aug 25 (ANI): The irrigation department has decided to turn off water taps next year, leaving sugarcane farmers high and dry in Bardoli subdivision of Gujarat’s Surat district.

The notice was forced by sharp decline in the water level of Ukai Dam because of inadequate monsoon rainfall in the region.

The farmers thought that since their farms were acclimatized to grow sugarcane they can’t sow other crop.

“The irrigation department has issued a notice that Ukai Dam has around 311 feet water level hence water wouldn’t be supplied for new sugarcane crop. But south Gujarat has maximum sugar factories. And since our land has acclimatized to grow sugarcane, we will have no profit if we try to sow some other crop,” said Girish Patel, a farmer.

Even the sugar factory owners in the region believe that the decision by irrigation department would hit the sugarcane production in the region.

“Gujarat produced 95 lakh ton sugar last year. This year too the state is expected to experience the same produce may be more. But because of unavailability of water from the irrigation department, it may be reduced to 40-50 lakh ton. I think there is going to be decline in sugar production,” said Babu Bhai Patel, Chairman, Bardoli sugar factory.

Monsoon rainfall has been 29 per cent below average this year, pushed the country to the brink of drought, reduced water levels in dams, putting pressure on food prices and energy supplies and imperilling overall growth. By Dharmesh (ANI)