By Rajesh Kumar Singh
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's retail inflation accelerated to a 14-month high in November, driven up by higher food prices, underscoring the challenge the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) faces in meeting its medium-term inflation target.
The consumer price index (CPI), which the central bank closely tracks for setting lending rates, rose an annual 5.41 percent last month, in line with a Reuters poll estimate. Retail prices were up 5.0 percent on-year in October.
The RBI aims to keep retail inflation to around 5 percent by March 2017. But steep government pay hikes and irregular rainfall pose risks to that target.
"The broader theme really has been a considerable pick-up in food inflation and unwinding of the favourable base of last year, as well as stickiness in services inflation," said Madhavi Arora, economist at Kotak Mahindra Bank in Mumbai.
In her view, the RBI will hold rates at least until March.
More From This Section
After easing monetary policy aggressively this year , the RBI earlier this month held the key repo rate at 6.75 percent.
While a crash in global commodity prices has tamped down prices in India, the central bank remains worried about elevated household inflationary expectations.
Retail food price jumped an annual 6.07 percent last month, faster than October's 5.25 percent rise.
INFLATION OUTLOOK CLOUDED
Monday's data came hours after the government reported a pickup in wholesale food prices.
While overall wholesale prices declined an annual 1.99 percent in November, their 13th straight fall, wholesale food prices gained 5.20 percent on year compared with October's provisional 2.44 percent rise.
Clouding the inflation outlook is the recommendation of a government panel for an average 24 percent pay hike for millions of its employees, which would lift demand-driven price pressures.
The RBI is also expected to contend with a potentially weakening rupee should outflows from emerging markets gather pace if, as widely anticipated, the Federal Reserve hikes U.S. interest rates this week.
According to a Reuters poll earlier this month, the Indian rupee will weaken through next year.
In this backdrop, very few expect aggressive rate cuts. Economists polled by Reuters last month said the RBI was likely to trim the repo rate by another 25 basis points in the April-June quarter and then stand pat until at least the end of 2016.
The RBI "faces a tough challenge in meeting its medium-term CPI inflation target, suggesting that the rate-cutting cycle has now come to an end," said Shilan Shah, an economist with Capital Economics.
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Richard Borsuk)