Retail inflation spiked to 3.99 per cent in September mainly due to higher prices of food items, government data showed on Monday.
The consumer price index (CPI)-based inflation was registered at 3.28 per cent in August. On year-on-year basis, the inflation was 3.70 per cent in the September 2018.
The price rise in the food basket was recorded at 5.11 per cent in September, as against 2.99 per cent in the preceding month, data from the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) showed.
also read
- Normal monsoon predicted for 2024. Is it enough to bring down inflation?
- With inflation likely to cool and growth strong, shallow rate cuts likely in the second half of FY25
- Inflation has slid again in Europe. What does this mean for interest rates?
- Retail inflation at 5.09 per cent in February, almost unchanged from January
The inflation print for vegetables shot up to 15.40 per cent during the month.
However, the headline inflation still remained within the comfort zone of the Reserve Bank, which mainly factors in CPI while arriving at its bi-monthly monetary policy.