
Wholesale food inflation cooled to 8.9% in November from 25-month high of 11.6%
The Hindu
India's wholesale prices ease in November, with food inflation slowing, fuel prices in deflation, and manufactured products rising.
India’s wholesale prices rose at a three-month low pace of 1.89% in November, easing from October’s 2.4% uptick, with food price inflation decelerating to 8.9% from a 25-month high of 11.6% in the previous month, even as manufactured products’ inflation accelerated to 2%.
Inflation in primary articles eased to 5.5% from 8.1% in October, while fuel and power remained in deflation zone, with prices falling 5.83% year-on-year.
On a sequential basis, the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) was down just 0.06%, led by a 1.2% fall in primary articles and a 0.45% decline in the Food Index. By contrast, fuel and power prices were up 1.2%, breaking a two-month streak of sequential declines, while manufactured products were 0.4% pricier than October.
EDITORIAL | Price worries: On inflation
Among manufactured products, some of the important groups that showed month-over-month increase in prices are food products, furniture, non-metallic mineral products, pharmaceuticals, medicinal chemical and botanical products and electrical equipment, the Commerce and Industry Ministry said.
Vegetable inflation that had soared over 63% in October, more than halved to 28.6%, but potato prices rose an alarming 82.8%, up from a little over 78% recorded in the previous two months. Onion inflation, which had halved from 78.8% in September to 39.25% in October, fell dramatically to a mere 2.85% in November.
The Ministry attributed November’s wholesale price inflation pace to the increase in prices of food articles, food products, other manufacturing, textiles, machinery and equipment.

Scaling Artificial Intelligence(AI) at the speed at which consultants project is not possible by the laws of physics and may not be environmentally sustainable, said Tanvir Khan, who is the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of NTT DATA North America, part of the Japanese technology services and data centre company NTT Data, in an interview with The Hindu.












