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November 13, 2020

Quickonomics: Counterintuitive inflation

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s inflation targeting is, in ways, embedded in the Phillips curve framework, which supposes an inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation in the short run – implying economic growth pushes up inflation and pulls down unemployment, and vice versa.

 

In fact, this is what lends intuitive support to a counter-cyclicalmonetary policy to stabilise inflation.

 

But India’s headline retail inflation, or inflation based on the consumer price index (CPI), has defied this relationship of late. CPI inflation printed at 7.6% for October, the highest in more than six years, even though the economy is faced with large-scale losses.

 

A recession-inflation situation such as this is highly undesirable and becomes a policy nightmare. Here’s why.