An industry body says India is winning the inflation fight — but the two-month comparison it leans on does a lot of the heavy lifting.
Industry chamber ASSOCHAM said on Friday that India is better placed than most of the world’s top 10 economies to manage retail inflation. It urged the Reserve Bank of India to keep the repo rate unchanged at its upcoming policy review. (Source: IANS)
The headline reads as reassuring for anyone with money in Indian markets. But the verdict rests on a specific two-month snapshot, and that framing is worth unpacking before reading it as a green light.
What the retail inflation numbers actually show
India’s retail inflation rose from 3.2% in February 2026 to 3.5% in April, an increase of just 0.3 percentage points — still comfortably inside the RBI’s 2–6% tolerance band around its 4% target. Over the same stretch, US inflation climbed from 2.4% to 3.8%, while France, Italy and Germany each rose by more than a full percentage point. (Source: BizzBuzz) On that change-over-change basis, India does look noticeably steadier than its developed-market peers, and ASSOCHAM also rates it ahead of Brazil.
Why the framing deserves scrutiny
The “better placed” label leans on the February-to-April move rather than the road ahead. The RBI’s own FY27 projection has pegged inflation closer to 4.6% — above today’s reading — even as it sees FY27 GDP growth near 6.9%, and a softer rupee adds imported-price pressure the two-month comparison does not capture. (Source: Arihant Plus) Crucially, this is one industry body’s analysis, not central-bank guidance — a distinction investors should keep front of mind.
What ASSOCHAM wants from the RBI
Beyond holding the repo rate at 5.25%, ASSOCHAM proposed a Rs 1 lakh crore “On-Tap LTRO” to channel liquidity to banks and NBFCs lending to export- and energy-linked MSMEs, chiefly for working-capital loans of up to Rs 10 crore. It also floated a 2% interest subvention on smaller loans, a possible six-month moratorium for energy-intensive units, and a roughly $5 billion swap auction. (Source: IANS, NewKerala) These remain recommendations only; the Monetary Policy Committee will decide independently.
Three things to verify
- Read the RBI’s most recent MPC statement and its FY27 inflation projection, then weigh both against ASSOCHAM’s benign framing.
- Check how the borrowing costs of your rate-sensitive holdings sit against the current 5.25% repo rate.
- Remember the liquidity proposals are MSME- and export-focused, not economy-wide, so confirm real exposure before assuming any broad market impact.
Author holdings disclosure: [insert before publishing].
This article is journalism and educational commentary, not investment advice. The author is not a SEBI-registered Research Analyst. Figures should be independently verified against official filings before any financial decision.
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