What Happened
- A poll of economists projected India's Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation for March 2026 at approximately 3.4%, up from 3.21% in February 2026.
- The uptick reflects two concurrent factors: rising global fuel costs (from West Asia geopolitical tensions) and a fading "base effect" — the comparison base from March 2025 was unusually low, making year-on-year inflation appear depressed; as that low base rolls off, headline CPI naturally rises.
- Despite the uptick, 3.4% remains comfortably below the RBI's 4% target and well within the 4%±2% tolerance band.
- The April 2026 MPC meeting considered this inflation trajectory in deciding to hold the repo rate at 5.25% — the mild uptick did not warrant a change, but further acceleration would be closely monitored.
Static Topic Bridges
Consumer Price Index (CPI): Compilation, Base Year, and Components
The Consumer Price Index measures the average change over time in prices paid by urban and rural consumers for a fixed basket of goods and services. In India, CPI is compiled by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) and released monthly.
- Compiling authority: MoSPI (National Statistical Office — NSO); data collection by Field Operations Division.
- New base year: 2024=100 (recently updated from 2012=100 to better reflect current consumption patterns).
- Release: Monthly, typically around the 12th-13th of the following month.
- Index variants: CPI-Rural, CPI-Urban, CPI-Combined (national headline figure).
- Basket components and weights (approximate, combined):
- Food and Beverages: ~45.9% (largest component)
- Fuel and Light: ~6.8%
- Housing: ~10.1%
- Clothing and Footwear: ~6.5%
- Transport and Communication: ~8.6%
- Health: ~5.9%
- Others: ~16.2%
- Core CPI (ex-food and fuel): ~35-37% weight; used to assess underlying demand-driven inflation.
Connection to this news: The March 2026 forecast of 3.4% reflects rising fuel & light inflation (West Asia energy shock) partially offsetting still-benign food inflation — a component-level story that the MPC watches carefully when assessing whether to act or hold.
Base Effect in Inflation Measurement
The "base effect" refers to the distortion in year-on-year inflation rates caused by an unusually high or low price level in the comparable period of the prior year. A low base (unusually low prices last year) produces artificially high inflation this year, and vice versa.
- Positive base effect: Prior year's price was low → current year-on-year inflation appears high (base effect inflates the reading).
- Negative base effect: Prior year's price was high → current year-on-year inflation appears low (base effect suppresses the reading).
- India's food prices in March 2025 were elevated (due to vegetable price spikes) — providing a high base that suppressed February 2026 CPI at 3.21%. As the high-base months roll off post-March, the base becomes more neutral, causing headline CPI to drift up.
- Central banks and analysts "look through" base effect-driven changes unless underlying momentum also accelerates.
Connection to this news: The forecast rise from 3.21% (February) to 3.4% (March) is primarily base-effect driven, not a signal of renewed inflationary pressure — this distinction is why economists do not expect the MPC to change course based on a single month's uptick.
Fuel Price Channel and Imported Inflation
India is heavily dependent on oil imports (~85% of crude requirements). When global crude oil prices rise due to geopolitical disruptions, domestic fuel prices rise through two channels: direct (petrol, diesel retail prices) and indirect (transport costs, fertiliser costs, manufacturing inputs).
- India's crude oil import volume: ~220-240 million tonnes per year; import bill: ~$130-150 billion.
- Petrol and diesel prices: Administered by oil marketing companies (HPCL, BPCL, IOCL) under central government oversight; retail prices have been largely frozen since 2022 despite global price movements.
- Cooking gas (LPG): Partially subsidised; price revisions managed by government.
- Fuel & Light in CPI: 6.8% weight; includes LPG, firewood, chips, dung cake, kerosene.
- A $10/barrel rise in crude adds approximately 0.3-0.4% to CPI through direct and indirect channels.
- West Asia tensions (Iran-Israel-US conflict in 2026): Risk of Strait of Hormuz disruption (20% of global oil trade passes through) can cause sharp crude price spikes.
Connection to this news: The mild forecast uptick to 3.4% incorporates partial pass-through of higher global energy costs. If the West Asia conflict escalates and crude crosses $100/barrel on a sustained basis, India's fuel inflation contribution to CPI could push headline inflation above 4% — the scenario that would trigger a reconsideration of the rate pause.
Key Facts & Data
- CPI February 2026 (actual): 3.21% (YoY; base year 2024=100)
- CPI March 2026 (forecast): ~3.4%
- RBI FY27 CPI projection: 4.6%
- RBI inflation target: 4% ± 2% (government-set for 2026-31)
- New CPI base year: 2024=100 (updated from 2012=100)
- Compiling authority: MoSPI (National Statistical Office)
- CPI release schedule: ~12th-13th of the following month
- Food & Beverages weight in CPI: ~45.9% (dominant component)
- Fuel & Light weight: ~6.8%
- India crude import dependence: ~85% of requirements