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Inflation: Meaning, Causes, Impacts and External Sector Effects | UPSC Notes

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Inflation: Meaning, Causes, Impacts and External Sector Effects

Inflation refers to a sustained rise in the general price level of goods and services in an economy. It reduces the purchasing power of money and affects households, businesses, government finances and the external sector. Inflation may arise due to demand-side pressures, cost-side pressures, supply bottlenecks, fiscal and monetary factors, imported inflation and geopolitical disruptions.

Causes of Inflation

Demand-Pull Inflation

Demand-pull inflation occurs when aggregate demand in the economy exceeds aggregate supply.

This happens when people, firms or the government demand more goods and services than the economy can produce.

  • Excessive Money Supply 
    • When money supply grows faster than real output — excess liquidity chases the same goods — prices rise 
    • RBI’s accommodative monetary policy — low repo rates — stimulates excess liquidity 
    • Bank credit expansion — particularly during boom — inflates demand beyond productive capacity 
      • Easy consumer credit — EMI culture, credit cards — enables spending beyond current income 
  • Fiscal Policy
    • Government policies like tax cuts or increased public spending can raise overall demand, leading to inflation if the economy is already operating at full capacity and supply cannot keep pace.
    • Fiscal expansion — increased government spending on salaries, subsidies, welfare schemes — boosts aggregate demand 
      • MGNREGS and direct benefit transfers — increase rural purchasing power — demand for food and consumer goods 
  • Structural Demand Shifts
    • Rising incomes and urbanisation shifting consumption from coarse cereals to protein-rich foods — milk, eggs, meat, pulses — whose supply is inherently less elastic
    • Middle class expansion driving demand for processed and packaged foods — more complex, cost-heavy supply chains 

Cost-Push Causes 

Cost-push inflation occurs when the cost of production increases and producers pass this burden to consumers through higher prices. 

  • Agricultural Supply Shocks 
    • India’s agriculture is heavily monsoon-dependent — poor monsoon → crop failure → immediate food price inflation 
    • Vegetable price volatility — onion, tomato, potato — highly sensitive to weather, seasonal, and logistical factors
    • Pulses and oilseeds — chronic structural production deficit — persistent food inflation driver independent of monsoon
    • Climate change — increasing frequency of droughts, unseasonal rain, and floods — amplifying supply-side shocks over time
  • Rising Input Costs 
    • Crude oil prices — India imports ~85% of oil needs — global price spikes directly raise transport, energy, and production costs across entire economy
    • Fertilizer price surges — post-Russia-Ukraine war — dramatically raised agricultural production costs — fed directly into food prices
    • Raw material costs — metals, chemicals, polymers — rising global commodity prices drive manufactured goods inflation
    • MSP increases — government raising minimum support prices — raises food grain procurement and market prices — feeds into entire food supply chain
    • Minimum wage and labour cost increases — rising input cost — passed through to final consumer prices
  • Supply Chain Disruptions 
    • COVID-19 pandemic — global supply chain collapse — shortage of semiconductors, shipping containers, and industrial components — raised costs of manufactured goods
    • Russia-Ukraine war — disrupted global food and energy supply chains — wheat, sunflower oil, fertilizer — simultaneously hitting food and energy costs
    • Iran-Israel-USA war — disrupted global energy supply chains 
  • Structural Supply Constraints 
    • Cold chain and storage infrastructure deficit — 30–40% of perishables wasted — effectively reduces market supply — raises prices artificially
    • Agricultural marketing inefficiency — long supply chains, multiple intermediaries — add cost mark-ups at every stage without adding value
    • Edible oil structural deficit — ~60% of domestic demand met through imports — creates permanent vulnerability to global price shocks
    • Monopoly and Market Power 
      • Monopoly and cartelisation — cement — administered price increases without competitive discipline
      • Lack of competition in essential services — telecom (pre-Jio), aviation 
  • Imported Inflation 
    • Global commodity price cycles — oil, metals, food — transmit directly into Indian production and consumer prices
    • Rupee depreciation — every 5% fall in rupee raises import costs — particularly oil, gold, fertilizer, and capital goods
    • US Federal Reserve rate hikes → capital outflows from India → rupee depreciation → imported inflation — an increasingly important transmission channel

Imported Inflation and the Exchange Rate

Exchange rate movements can also affect prices and influence inflation outcomes. A decrease in the value of the domestic currency − that is, a depreciation − will increase inflation in two ways. First, the prices of goods and services produced overseas rise relative to those produced domestically. Consequently, consumers pay more to buy the same imported products and firms that rely on imported materials in their production processes pay more to buy these inputs. The price increases of imported goods and services contribute directly to inflation through the cost-push channel.

Second, a depreciation of the currency stimulates aggregate demand. This occurs because exports become relatively cheaper for foreigners to buy, leading to an increase in demand for exports and higher aggregate demand. At the same time, domestic consumers and firms reduce their consumption of relatively more expensive imports and shift their purchases towards domestically produced goods and services, again leading to an increase in aggregate demand. This increase in aggregate demand puts pressure on domestic production capacity, and increases the scope for domestic firms to raise their prices. These price increases contribute indirectly to inflation through the demand-pull channel.

In terms of imported inflation, the exchange rate has a greater influence on inflation through its effect on the prices of goods and services that are exported and imported (known as tradable goods and services), while prices of non-tradable goods and services depend more on domestic developments.

Inflation expectations

  • Inflation expectations are the beliefs that households and firms have about future price increases. They are important because expectations about future price increases can affect current economic decisions that can influence actual inflation outcomes. 
    • For example, if firms expect future inflation to be higher and act on those beliefs, they may raise the prices of their goods and services at a faster rate. 
    • Similarly, if workers expect future inflation to be higher, they may demand higher wages to make up for the expected loss of their purchasing power. 
  • These behaviours, sometimes called ‘inflation psychology’, can contribute to a higher rate of actual inflation so that expectations about inflation become self-fulfilling.

Impact of Inflation

  • Impact on Households and Consumers 
    • Erosion of Purchasing Power 
      • Inflation is effectively a hidden tax on savings and incomes — same money buys less over time
        • People have to spend more to buy the same goods and services, which affects the standard of living, especially of poor and middle-class households. 
      • People with fixed income, such as pensioners, daily wage earners, salaried employees and small savers, suffer because their income may not rise at the same pace as prices. 
      • Real wages decline when inflation exceeds nominal wage growth — particularly in informal sector
        • If wages do not increase in proportion to inflation, real wages fall.
        • This means workers may earn the same nominal wage but are able to buy fewer goods and services.
      • Food inflation is most regressive — poor households spend 50–60% of income on food — disproportionately hurt
      • Savings erosion — real value of bank deposits declines when deposit rates are below inflation
    • Distributional and Equity Impacts 
      • Inflation is inherently regressive — hits the poor harder than the rich
      • Wealthy hold real assets — land, gold, equities — that appreciate with inflation — protected or even benefited
      • Poor hold cash and deposits — whose real value falls with inflation
      • Urban poor — without access to PDS — face full brunt of market food inflation
      • Migrant workers — in cities, without social protection — are most vulnerable to inflation shocks
      • Inflation widens inequality — a particularly damaging outcome for India’s already unequal society
    • Nutritional and Health Impacts 
      • Food inflation causes dietary substitution — poor shift from nutritious to cheaper, less nutritious foods
      • Reduces protein and micronutrient intake — worsening hidden hunger
      • Child malnutrition worsens during food inflation episodes — long-term human capital damage
      • Healthcare cost inflation — rising medicine, hospital costs — pushes households into poverty
      • Out-of-pocket health expenditure — already 60%+ of total health spending — rises with medical inflation
  • Impact on Economy and Growth 
    • Impact on Investment and Growth 
      • Uncertainty from high inflation reduces business investment 
        • Businesses find it difficult to estimate costs and profits, which may reduce private investment 
      • Real interest rates — if negative (inflation > deposit rate) — discourage saving, distort investment
      • Cost-push inflation raises production costs — squeezes corporate margins — reduces investment
      • Inflation erodes international competitiveness — exports become expensive — current account worsens
      • High inflation economies attract less FDI — investors prefer stable price environments
  • Impact on Monetary Policy 
    • RBI mandated to maintain CPI inflation at 4% ± 2% — inflation above target forces rate hikes
    • Interest rate increases — to control inflation — raise borrowing costs for businesses and households
    • Credit contraction — monetary tightening slows investment and consumption — growth-inflation trade-off
    • Currency appreciation pressure from rate hikes — affects export competitiveness 
  • Fiscal Impacts 
    • Inflation increases nominal tax revenues — GST, income tax — partially beneficial for government
    • But expenditure also rises — salary revisions, subsidy burden increases with commodity prices
    • Subsidy bill explodes during inflation — food, fertilizer, petroleum subsidies surge
    • Interest payments rise — as RBI raises rates — government borrowing costs increase
    • FRBM targets threatened — subsidy surge and revenue uncertainty disrupt fiscal consolidation
  • Impact on Financial Sector 
    • Real returns on savings turn negative — discourages financial saving — promotes physical asset investment 
    • Bond markets — inflation erodes bond value — rising yields hurt existing bondholders
    • Equity markets — mixed impact — some sectors benefit , others hurt 
  • External Sector 
    • Reduces Export Competitiveness
      • When domestic inflation is high, the cost of producing goods in India rises. As a result, Indian goods become costlier in the international market, reducing their price competitiveness.
    • Leads to Higher Imports
      • If domestic goods become expensive, consumers and firms may shift towards relatively cheaper imported goods. This can increase the import bill.
    • Widens Trade Deficit
      • Inflation can reduce exports and increase imports. This may widen the trade deficit, especially when India is already dependent on imports of crude oil, fertilisers, edible oil and electronic components.
    • Creates Pressure on Current Account Deficit
      • A higher import bill and weaker exports can widen the Current Account Deficit. This increases India’s dependence on foreign capital inflows.
    • Causes Pressure on Rupee
      • A widening current account deficit increases demand for foreign currency, especially dollars, to pay for imports. This can put depreciation pressure on the rupee.
    • Creates Imported Inflation
      • If the rupee depreciates, imports become costlier. This further raises prices of crude oil, fertilisers, machinery, electronic components and other imported inputs.
    • Affects Foreign Investment Sentiment
      • High inflation creates macroeconomic uncertainty. Foreign investors may become cautious if inflation remains high and affects growth, interest rates and currency stability.
  • Political and Social Impacts 
    • Political Economy of Inflation 
      • Food inflation is politically explosive in India — onion prices have brought down governments
      • Electoral consequences — parties in power during high inflation face voter backlash
      • Creates political pressure for populist responses — price controls, export bans, import liberalisation — often counterproductive
      • Social unrest — sustained high inflation erodes social contract — historically linked to political instability globally

Inflation is both an economic and social challenge. While moderate inflation may reflect rising demand and economic activity, high and persistent inflation hurts the poor, reduces real income, weakens savings, discourages investment, increases inequality and creates pressure on the external sector through higher imports, trade deficit and rupee depreciation.

Sample Mains Questions

Q1. What is inflation? Explain the major causes of inflation in India.
(150 words, 10 marks)

Q2. Distinguish between demand-pull inflation and cost-push inflation with suitable examples.
(150 words, 10 marks)

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