Repo Rate Kept Steady at 5.25% in RBI's
June 2026 Monetary Policy Meeting
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI) unanimously kept the repo rate unchanged at 5.25% and
maintained a neutral stance during its June 2026 bi-monthly meeting.
What is the Repo Rate?
¨
The repo rate is the
interest rate at which the RBI lends money to commercial banks for the short
term.
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This rate is a key tool
that influences interest rates, the cost of borrowing, and overall economic
activity in the country.
Key Highlights of the Changes Introduced
¨
Revision of WPI Base
Year: The base year of the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) has been revised from
2011–12 to 2022–23 to better reflect current production patterns, consumption
structures and the evolving composition of the Indian economy.
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Introduction of Producer
Price Index (PPI): India will introduce a new Producer Price Index (PPI)
framework to measure producer-level inflation more comprehensively by capturing
price changes in both goods and services.
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Phased Transition: The
existing WPI series and the new PPI framework will run concurrently for a
transition period of about five years, enabling businesses, policymakers and
statistical agencies to gradually shift towards PPI-based assessments and
contracts.
¨
Release Timeline: Both
the revised WPI series and the newly developed PPI framework are scheduled to
be released on 15 June 2026.
Key Highlights of the New WPI Series
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Expanded and Updated
Commodity Basket: The total number of commodities covered under WPI has
increased from 697 to 957, improving the representativeness of the index and
better capturing contemporary production patterns in the economy.
¨
Improved Coverage of the
Energy Sector: The revised series incorporates solar, wind and nuclear energy
under the Electricity group, while crude petroleum and natural gas have been
shifted from ‘Primary Articles’ to ‘Fuel and Power’, creating a more coherent
framework for tracking energy prices.
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Producer-Oriented
Weighting Structure: The new series uses Gross Value of Output (GVO) for
assigning commodity weights instead of the earlier Net Traded Value approach,
thereby better reflecting the economic significance of commodities from a
producer’s perspective.
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Modernised Compilation
Methodology: The revised WPI adopts a chain-based short-term index formulation
and introduces Targeted Mean Imputation for handling missing price data,
enhancing the accuracy, reliability and responsiveness of inflation
measurement.
¨Key
Features of the New PPI Framework
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Comprehensive Producer
Price Measurement: Unlike WPI, the new PPI framework will capture price
movements across both goods and services, providing a more holistic measure of
producer-level inflation in the economy.
¨
Multi-Dimensional
Structure: The framework will comprise Output PPI, Input PPI and Services PPI,
enabling separate tracking of prices received by producers, input cost
pressures and service-sector inflation.
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Integration of the
Services Sector: Recognising the growing importance of services in the Indian
economy, the initial Services PPI will cover seven services viz., Banking,
Securities Transaction, Insurance, Management of Pension Funds, Railways, Air
(Passenger), and Telecom.
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Improved Inflation
Tracking Across Production Stages: By simultaneously capturing input costs and
output prices, the new framework will facilitate a better assessment of cost
build-up and inflation transmission within the economy.
¨
Phased and
Internationally Aligned Implementation: The Services PPI will initially be
released on a quarterly basis, with the overall framework designed in line with
internationally accepted producer-price measurement practices.
Why is India Shifting from WPI to PPI?
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Alignment with Global
Best Practices: Most advanced and emerging economies use PPI rather than WPI as
the primary indicator of producer-level inflation, making the transition an
important statistical reform.
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Better Reflection of
India’s Economic Structure: As services account for a major share of India’s
GDP, an index covering only goods is no longer sufficient to capture
economy-wide producer price movements.
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More Comprehensive
Inflation Measurement: By tracking input costs, output prices and service
prices, PPI provides a more complete picture of inflationary pressures across
the production chain.
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Improved Inflation
Transmission Analysis: PPI can help identify cost pressures before they are
passed on to consumers, enabling a better understanding of inflation
transmission within the economy.
Significance of the Reform
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Modernising India’s
Statistical Architecture: The introduction of PPI and the revision of WPI
represent one of the most significant upgrades to India’s inflation measurement
framework in over a decade and align economic statistics with contemporary
realities.
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Better Economic and
Policy Decision-Making: A more comprehensive producer-price measure will
improve inflation forecasting, business pricing decisions and evidence-based
monetary, fiscal and industrial policymaking.
¨ Improving National Income Estimation: Over time, PPI data can be used more effectively for deflating nominal values into real values, thereby improving GDP estimation and sectoral growth measurement.
¨ Enhancing Sector-Specific Analysis: Separate indices for inputs, outputs and services will provide policymakers and businesses with deeper insights into sector-wise cost dynamics and emerging inflationary trends.