The ongoing conflict in West Asia has not yet had a major impact on India’s retail inflation, though future price trends will depend on fuel costs, crop coverage and global supply conditions, according to a report by State Bank of India.
The report said the trajectory of inflation in the coming months would largely be shaped by the extent to which higher energy prices are passed on to consumers, the progress of summer crop sowing and movements in individual inflation components.
“We believe the trajectory of future inflation will be shaped by three factors -- the pass through of higher energy prices to retail prices, progress of area coverage under summer crop, which as of May 08 is showing a reduction in 3 lakh hectare and any large individual inflation movement on the negative side,” the report stated, as quoted by nes agency ANI.
India’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation rose marginally to 3.48% in April 2026 from 3.40% in March.
Despite geopolitical uncertainty and rising global energy prices, the SBI report retained its CPI inflation forecast for FY27 at 4.5%.
Imported inflation eases slightly
According to ANI, the report examined whether the Iran conflict and disruptions in West Asia had started affecting imported inflation and supply chains.
It found that imported inflation, which has a weight of 21.84% in the CPI basket, eased slightly to 6.34% in April from 6.49% in March.
The weighted contribution of imported inflation remained stable at 1.42%.
“Despite exchange rate fluctuations and external shocks like supply chain disruptions, the imported inflation has not increased but decelerated slightly,” the report noted.
The report added that inflation in restaurants and accommodation services rose sharply, partly due to LPG shortages.
At the same time, softer gold and silver prices helped reduce inflationary pressure in the personal care segment, leading to a decline of nearly 100 basis points in inflation within that category.
Food prices continue to drive inflation
India’s retail inflation in April touched its highest level in more than a year, driven mainly by rising food prices.
Food inflation, measured through the Consumer Food Price Index (CFPI), increased to 4.20% in April from 3.87% in March.
Inflation in rural India stood at 3.74%, higher than the 3.16% recorded in urban areas, the report said.
Among major food items, tomato prices jumped 35.28% year-on-year in April, while potato and onion prices remained in deflation territory at minus 23.69% and minus 17.67%, respectively.
Inflation in the personal care and miscellaneous category remained elevated at 17.66%, while transport inflation was largely flat at minus 0.01%.
The Reserve Bank of India had last month projected CPI inflation for 2026-27 at 4.6% and warned that elevated energy prices due to the Middle East conflict and possible El Niño conditions could pose upside risks to inflation going forward.
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