Thursday, February 12, 2026

Understanding the 2026 Indian Inflation Outlook: Distinguishing Base Effects from True Demand.....

Introduction

The trajectory of inflation in India approaching 2026 is uniquely poised to be dictated by statistical mechanics rather than solely by fundamental economic forces. With the Indian government shifting the Consumer Price Index (CPI) base year to 2024 and significantly reducing the weightage of volatile food and fuel components—which previously constituted nearly half of the index—the headline inflation figures have appeared anomalously low through late 2025. As India enters mid-2026, a potential surge in reported inflation is anticipated, not driven by overheated demand or supply shortages, but primarily by a low base effect stemming from the historically low inflation recorded after June 2025. Investors and policymakers must therefore carefully dissect whether future headline inflation reflects structural demand-supply imbalances or merely a statistical reversal, ensuring that monetary policy and investment decisions are not based on misleading data.

The Base Period Distortions and 2026 Projections

The Consumer Price Index in India, which was based on 2012, recorded exceptionally low levels through 2025, reaching a nadir of 1.33% in December 2025, with food inflation often in the deflationary zone. This created a "base" for comparison that is fundamentally not normal. When calculating year-on-year inflation starting from June 2026, the comparisons will be drawn against these extremely low figures from 2025. As a result, even moderate increases in prices will yield high year-on-year percentage growth rates. Projections indicate that despite a, for instance, 1.7% average headline inflation in the April-December 2025 period, inflation could face sharp upward pressure purely due to these base effects. Experts expect this statistical effect to dominate through the middle of 2026, potentially showing an uptick in headline numbers even if actual consumer pressure remains contained.

Reduced Food and Fuel Weightage and Demand Signals

The new 2024-based CPI series, implemented in February 2026, addresses previous criticisms by lowering the weight of food and beverages from approximately 45.86% to 36.75%. While this change makes the index less volatile by reducing the impact of seasonal food price swings, it does not remove the underlying base effect issue. The low inflation experienced in late 2025 was driven heavily by a surplus monsoon, allowing food prices to decline, but this, paired with reduced weights, means the headline index may not fully capture the cost-of-living experiences of lower-income households. A major risk is that this, coupled with a low-base effect in 2026, will give a wrong signal of high demand. If the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) interprets high headline inflation in mid-2026 as a sign of high demand, they might keep interest rates too high, which could choke a genuinely recovering economy (expected to grow at 7.4% in 2025-26). The data implies that the upcoming high inflation is primarily a "2025 hangover" rather than a 2026 demand spike.

Investor Strategy: Dissecting the Data

Investors must critically analyze the inflationary drivers during 2026. A simple reliance on headline CPI data could lead to mistaken investments, particularly in interest-rate-sensitive sectors. While headline inflation is expected to rise to 4% or higher from June 2026, it is crucial to monitor "core" inflation (excluding food and fuel) and sequential momentum rather than just year-on-year changes. The 2025 experience—where high food inflation caused headline inflation to seem higher than it felt for many, or vice versa when it dropped—shows that headline numbers are easily distorted. Investors must consider if inflation is driven by supply-side disruptions (e.g., monsoon issues) or strong, consumption-driven demand. With projections showing core inflation remaining manageable and the RBI potentially adopting a more data-dependent stance, investors should look for signs of "base effect" dissipation rather than panic over high headline numbers.

Conclusion

The Indian economy is experiencing a complex interplay between a restructured, more modern, but lower-weighted food basket and a base effect caused by exceptionally low inflation in 2025. The high inflation numbers projected for 2026 are largely statistical rather than structural, a consequence of the low base in 2025. While this may signal a rise in nominal inflation, it does not necessarily represent an overheating economy. Therefore, navigating the 2026 inflationary environment requires distinguishing between illusory high inflation, which is a statistical artefact of the 2025 base, and real inflation, which would reflect a surge in demand. Investors who correctly distinguish between these two will be better positioned, while policy errors based on misleading high inflation readings could potentially result in actual economic slowdowns due to unwarranted policy tightening.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

The Investment Relay: Government-Led Capex and Private Sector Hesitation in India.....

Introduction

The Indian economy currently presents a fascinating dichotomy where macroeconomic growth indicators remain robust while the engine of private sector investment operates below capacity. Over the past five years, the baton for capital expenditure (CAPEX) has been firmly held by the government, which has been driving investment to build foundational infrastructure. This heavy lifting has been necessitated by a prolonged hesitation in private sector investment, driven by a combination of sluggish demand, capacity underutilization, and, crucially, high inflation and volatile price expectations. As India aims for a $5 trillion economy, the reliance on public spending rather than private enterprise poses significant questions about the sustainability of its growth model, especially as inflationary pressures compress corporate margins and create a "wait-and-watch" mentality among investors.

Why the Government Holds the Baton

The shift towards government-driven investment has been a strategic response to structural slowdowns in the private sector since roughly 2012–13. Following the pandemic, the central government intensified this role to revive economic growth, employing a "crowding-in" strategy, where public infrastructure investment is intended to create the necessary conditions to attract private capital. In the 2024–25 Union Budget, the government continued this trend with a massive capital expenditure allocation of INR 11.11 lakh crore, representing roughly 3.4% of GDP. This investment is heavily focused on infrastructure, including roads, railways, and renewable energy, aimed at boosting productivity and reducing logistics costs through initiatives like the PM GatiShakti National Master Plan. Furthermore, the government has used direct incentives to spur manufacturing, notably the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes with an outlay of over INR 1.97 lakh crore, aimed at sectors like electronics, pharma, and automobiles. State governments have also stepped up in certain quarters, with 34.6% growth in their fresh investments in Q3 FY25, providing a crucial boost to the overall investment landscape.

Why the Private Sector is Delaying Investment

Despite high corporate profitability in 2024 and significant corporate tax cuts introduced earlier, the private sector has been reluctant to initiate large-scale greenfield projects. Data indicates that private corporate investment has remained stagnant at around 12% of GDP for over a decade. A primary reason for this, as evidenced by a 1.4% decline in private investment plans in the third quarter (Q3) of FY 2024-25, is the perception of weak demand and fears over rising costs. Many companies continue to operate with capacity utilization below 75-80%, reducing the immediate need for new plants and machinery. Additionally, firms have preferred to pay down debt or return capital to shareholders through buybacks rather than investing in new projects. The lingering impact of high debt levels, or corporate balance sheet issues, has made firms cautious about long-term debt-funded expansion, creating a scenario where, despite having cash, they prefer liquidity.

The Role of Inflation and Price Expectations

Inflation and price expectations have played a critical role in delaying private investment. High inflationary pressures, particularly in the aftermath of global supply chain disruptions and high energy costs, have significantly compressed corporate margins. When input prices rise faster than the selling prices of finished goods, profitability shrinks, and companies become wary of new investment, fearing they cannot pass the costs on to consumers in a weak demand environment. Moreover, high food inflation in India, which has been volatile, can restrain discretionary spending, further suppressing demand.

Price expectations are crucial; if manufacturers anticipate that high inflation will continue, they may hesitate to invest in projects with long gestation periods, as the cost of raw materials and labor might make the project unviable upon completion. Data shows that even when retail inflation was showing signs of easing in early 2025 (4.9% from April to December 2024), input cost fears remained, with 1.4% of private plans being pulled back in Q3 FY25 due to these concerns. The RBI’s inflation-targeting framework, which requires keeping inflation within a 2-6% band, means that when inflation surprises on the upside, it often leads to high interest rates, making borrowing more expensive for companies, thus acting as a deterrent to expansion.

Conclusion

The current investment scenario in India is defined by a "paradox of 2025," where strong macroeconomic performance, driven by public investment, has not yet translated into a robust private-sector revival. The government, through massive infrastructure spending and incentives like the PLI scheme, has taken the lead to bolster the economy's productive capacity, but this cannot be a permanent substitute for private investment. The delay by the private sector is not merely due to lack of funds, but to a cautious approach driven by idle capacity, weak demand, and the erosion of margins due to persistent inflationary pressures and uncertain price expectations. While the 2024-25 budget has attempted to create a better environment with the removal of the angel tax and focus on SME credit, the long-term sustainability of India’s 7%+ growth depends on the private sector regaining the confidence to start investing again. Until inflationary pressures are fully anchored and demand improves significantly, the baton for investment is likely to remain in the government's hands. 

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Productivity, Market Structure, and the Dynamics of Pricing.....

Introduction

The relationship between productivity and pricing is a cornerstone of economic theory, yet its practical application is fundamentally mediated by the structure of the market. While the productivity theory suggests that gains in efficiency should lead to lower consumer prices, this outcome is not guaranteed. Instead, the final price is determined by the degree of market power held by firms, which dictates whether the benefits of increased productivity are passed on to the consumer or retained as surplus profit. By examining how monopolies and perfectly competitive firms set prices, one can understand the critical role that market entry and supply expansion play in driving price competition.

The Mechanism of Productivity and Market Power

The core of the productivity theory holds that when firms become more efficient—producing more output with fewer inputs—the marginal cost of production falls. In an ideal economic scenario, these cost savings translate into lower prices for the end user. However, market power functions as a filter for these savings. Market power is the ability of a firm to raise prices above marginal cost without losing all its customers. In markets with high barriers to entry, firms can leverage productivity gains to increase their profit margins rather than lowering prices, effectively decoupling productivity from price relief. Consequently, the benefits of innovation and efficiency are often captured by the producer rather than the consumer when competition is absent.

Pricing Disparity Between Monopoly and Perfect Competition

A monopoly and a firm in a perfectly competitive market operate under vastly different pricing incentives. In perfect competition, firms are "price takers" who must accept the market equilibrium price determined by the intersection of aggregate demand and supply. Because many firms sell identical products and entry is free, any individual firm that attempts to price above the market rate will lose its entire customer base. Here, productivity gains almost inevitably lead to lower prices because competitive pressure forces firms to pass savings along to maintain their market share. In contrast, a monopoly is a "price maker" with no close substitutes for its product. A monopolist maximizes profit by restricting output and setting prices where marginal revenue equals marginal cost, often resulting in higher prices and lower output than what would be seen in a competitive environment. For a monopolist, increased productivity may simply result in higher "deadweight loss" or increased producer surplus rather than a cheaper product for the public.

Market Entry and the Catalysis of Price Competition

The transition from a concentrated market to a more competitive one occurs through the entry of new firms. When barriers to entry are low and new participants enter the market, the total supply of the good increases. According to the law of supply and demand, an outward shift in the supply curve—driven by both more firms and their individual productivity improvements—places downward pressure on the equilibrium price. As more firms vie for the same pool of consumers, price competition becomes the primary tool for gaining market share. This competitive process ensures that the "precedents" of high pricing set by former incumbents are challenged. Over time, the influx of competitors transforms the market structure, reducing the market power of any single entity and forcing a closer alignment between production costs and consumer prices.

Conclusion

Ultimately, the theory that productivity leads to lower prices is highly dependent on the competitive landscape. While perfect competition serves as an engine that passes efficiency gains to the consumer, a monopoly can act as a dam, holding back those benefits to maximize private gain. The entry of new firms is the essential mechanism that breaks market power, stimulates supply, and ensures that the fruits of productivity are reflected in the marketplace. Without robust competition, the link between working smarter and paying less is easily severed by those with the power to set the price.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Long-Run Macroeconomic Growth with Deflationary Expectations and Supply-Side Enhancement.....

Economic growth is traditionally viewed through the lens of expanding demand or increased capital accumulation. However, a significant, often overlooked, driver of long-run growth is the interplay between lower prices, downwardly adjusted inflation expectations, and enhanced supply-side efficiency. This model explores how a sustained, lower price environment, supported by lower inflationary expectations, can lead to a rightward shift in the Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) curve, stimulating potential output. By reducing the nominal cost of inputs and fostering productivity gains, an economy can experience sustainable, non-inflationary growth, reversing the conventional wisdom that lower prices only signify recessionary pressures.

Model Construction

The model relies on the AD-AS framework, operating in the long run where all input costs and expectations are fully flexible. The core equation for Long-Run Aggregate Supply is (Y_{L}=f(K,L,T,P^{e}), where (Y_{L}) is potential GDP, (K) is capital, (L) is labor, (T) is technology, and (P^{e}) is expected price level. In this model, a lower price level (P) and lower inflationary expectations (P^{e}) influence the supply side. When producers expect lower future prices and costs, they invest in cost-saving technology and productive capacity, shifting the Aggregate Supply curve rightward.

Graphically, this involves a downward adjustment in input costs, such as nominal wages and raw material costs, shifting the Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve rightward. In the long run, this persistent shift, coupled with increased productivity from the lower-price environment, causes the vertical LRAS curve to move to the right, indicating a higher level of potential output (Y_{L}).

The mechanism works because, unlike a sudden negative demand shock that reduces output, a gradual reduction in price levels and inflationary expectations (a positive supply shock) allows for lower, more stable production costs. The lower (P^{e}) reduces the need for workers to bargain for high nominal wage increases, which lowers the cost of production and increases the long-run capacity of the economy.

Data Analysis

Data analysis of inflationary periods, such as the Volcker disinflation, indicates that while lower prices initially cause a contraction in output, the long-term impact of lower inflation expectations is stabilizing, enabling stronger growth. Empirical studies on supply shocks show that when price expectations decrease alongside a positive supply-side adjustment, the long-run Phillips curve shows a lower price level without a permanent drop in output.

In a scenario where technology increases productivity, costs fall, leading to lower prices, which allows for increased real income and greater investment in the long run. Furthermore, research suggests that when inflationary expectations are well-anchored at a lower level, the supply chain becomes more efficient, leading to higher, more sustainable output levels. The analysis of decreasing-cost industries, which often accompany lower prices due to technological improvements, confirms that lower prices can coincide with higher supply, shifting the long-run supply curve to the right.

The long-run model of economic growth with lower prices and lower inflation expectations demonstrates that downward pressure on prices can, in fact, drive economic growth. By reducing input costs and aligning inflationary expectations to a lower, more stable rate, an economy enhances its productive capacity, illustrated by a rightward shift in the LRAS curve. While the transition may involve short-run adjustments, the long-run equilibrium achieves higher potential GDP through increased efficiency and lower costs. Therefore, policy frameworks that foster productivity-led, lower price environments are conducive to sustainable, long-term expansion rather than merely causing deflationary stagnation.

Friday, February 6, 2026

RBI’s February 2026 Policy: A Delayed Response to Low Underlying Inflation and Sluggish Demand.....

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) decision on February 6, 2026, to maintain a status quo on the repo rate at 5.25% and retain a "neutral" stance, despite a challenging deflationary environment, represents a critical, albeit arguably delayed, acknowledgement of the "low inflation" problem. While headline inflation has shown signs of a slight uptick due to volatile precious metal prices, the underlying economic reality—when excluding gold and silver—is one of exceptionally benign price pressures and weak consumer demand, pointing to a need for continued monetary easing. The decision reflects an excessive, albeit cautious, focus on headline numbers, failing to address the acute need to stimulate spending and rectify the imbalances in supply and demand in the economy.

Low Inflation and the "Ex-Gold/Silver" Reality

The core issue facing the Indian economy in early 2026 is that inflation has consistently operated well below the 4% target. While the RBI projected CPI inflation for FY26 at 2.1% (up from 2.0%), the underlying, or "core," inflation remains exceptionally low, suggesting that the economy is facing a deflationary, rather than inflationary, pressure. The "headline" numbers have been artificially elevated by a sharp surge in gold and silver prices (36% year-on-year in some segments), which are essentially safe-haven investments rather than consumer goods demand. When excluding these components, the underlying price pressures are extremely subdued, bordering on deflationary in some sectors, suggesting the RBI is overreacting to volatility in precious metals.

Delay in Addressing Spending and Demand

The refusal to cut rates is a failure to address the sluggishness in consumer demand. While GDP growth is projected at a robust 7.4% for FY26, this number is heavily supported by government-led capital expenditure rather than widespread private consumption. Urban consumption, in particular, remains weaker than rural consumption, which has only recently shown signs of recovery. The continued high cost of credit, which has not fully transmitted to the final consumer despite 125 bps of easing throughout 2025, is limiting spending. The RBI's "wait-and-watch" approach is a significant delay in acting, as the "real" interest rate remains elevated, hindering economic velocity.

Supply and Demand Mismatch

The current economic conditions are characterized by a supply-side that has recovered well—supported by favourable monsoons and high production—outpacing the demand-side, which is lagging. The economy has seen a "Goldilocks" scenario turn into a "weak-demand" scenario, where the supply of goods is ample (keeping food inflation low), but consumer purchasing power, especially in urban areas, is not keeping pace. The RBI's decision to pause, thus, fails to address this structural weakness. A cut in the repo rate would have lowered the cost of credit, boosting consumption and helping to bridge the gap between strong supply and weak consumer spending.

In conclusion, the RBI’s decision to keep the repo rate at 5.25% in February 2026 is a "wait-and-watch" approach that acts as a delay in addressing the core problem of low, non-commodity-driven inflation and the need to boost consumption. By focusing on headline CPI, which is distorted by gold prices, the MPC is overlooking the underlying deflationary pressures that require a more accommodative stance. With private demand still weak and supply conditions strong, the status quo acts as a drag on economic potential, delaying the necessary stimulus to make growth more inclusive and robust. The decision is a "delayed acceptance" of the low-growth-demand reality, prioritizing a rigid inflation target over a needed boost to spending.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

The Paradox of Rate Cuts: Why Below-Target Inflation and High Real Rates Demand Policy Easing.....

When central bank inflation targets are set, they are generally intended to provide a stable, small positive buffer to encourage spending and prevent deflationary spirals, usually around 2% to 4% depending on the institution. A situation where inflation and expectations are running at 2%—significantly lower than a 4% target—creates a scenario of high real interest rates that can stifle economic activity. Despite the conventional view that rate cuts stimulate spending, the prevailing economic conditions, characterized by high nominal rates (e.g., 5.25%) relative to low inflation (2%), create a "real" interest rate that is higher than the long-run neutral rate. Consequently, this environment raises expectations for rate cuts, which are ironically necessary to prevent a, or, paradoxically, to reinforce, a, or delay in, spending, ultimately preventing inflation from falling further.

The Dynamics of High Real Rates and Low Inflation

In this scenario, inflation and its expectations have anchored at 2%, which is 2 percentage points below the 4% target. According to the Fisher Equation, the real interest rate is calculated as the nominal interest rate (5.25%) minus inflation (2%), resulting in a real rate of 3.25%. If the long-run neutral rate (the rate that neither speeds up nor slows down the economy) is 2%, a real rate of 3.25% is significantly contractionary. This means money is expensive, making borrowing costs for consumers and businesses high.

When inflation is this low (or falling), the real value of debt increases. Savers benefit, but borrowers are penalized, leading to a reduction in consumption and capital expenditure. The high real rate acts as a barrier to investment. As seen in recent economic data, when inflation drops below the central bank’s target range, the real policy rate becomes too restrictive, often acting as a drag on private investment and overall economic growth.

Why Rate Cut Expectations Rise

With inflation running well below the 4% target, the central bank’s monetary policy is deemed too tight. The primary mandate of most central banks is to keep inflation around their target; thus, inflation at 2% versus 4% indicates an over-tightening of policy. Market participants and analysts therefore increase their expectations for rate cuts to bring the real rate back down closer to the neutral rate (2%).

The high real rate (3.25%) represents a "drag" on the economy. To prevent inflation from falling further, or potentially entering a deflationary spiral where consumers delay spending in expectation of lower future prices, rate cuts are necessary to incentivize economic activity. Furthermore, when inflation falls below targets, central banks must act to prevent "low inflation traps" which can lead to weak demand and, ironically, even lower inflation in the future.

How Rate Cuts Reinforce Spending

Cutting the 5.25% nominal rate, for instance, to 4.5% would immediately lower the cost of borrowing. This eases the burden on households and businesses, encouraging increased, rather than delayed, spending. If the 3.25% real rate is currently causing a slowdown, a reduction in the nominal rate reduces this real burden, boosting consumption and investment.

The delay in spending occurs when real rates are high because the cost of capital is prohibitive. By lowering the nominal rate, the central bank reduces the real rate (nominal rate - inflation), thereby reducing the cost of borrowing, which should boost investment and consumption, making loans more affordable. Therefore, contrary to the fear that rate cuts might not immediately spark spending, they are necessary to remove the high-cost barriers that are causing the delay in the first place.

A situation where inflation (2%) is significantly below a 4% target means that a 5.25% nominal rate produces a high real interest rate, which is restrictive. This high real rate (3.25%) is far above the estimated 2% neutral rate, which causes a, or, paradoxically, to reinforce, a, or delay in, spending, ultimately preventing inflation from falling further. The resulting economic slowdown drives expectations for rate cuts. These cuts are designed to reduce the high real cost of borrowing, encouraging consumption and business investment, thereby preventing the economy from falling into a low-inflation, low-growth trap, or, or, paradoxically, to reinforce, a, or delay in, spending, ultimately preventing inflation from falling further. Thus, rate cuts in this scenario are essential to re-accelerate spending and bring inflation back up to the target.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The Great Pivot: Modi’s Strategic Shift from Moscow to Washington.....

In a move that has sent shockwaves through global energy markets and reshaped geopolitical alliances, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has reportedly agreed to halt oil imports from Russia. This dramatic reversal comes after months of Indian reliance on discounted Russian crude, which surged to nearly one-third of India's total imports in 2025. The sudden pivot, likely precipitated by crippling U.S. tariffs on Indian goods and a strategic reassessment of economic gains, signals a pragmatic,, "India-first" foreign policy that prioritizes long-term economic stability over short-term discounted energy gains.

The Economic Logic: Losses and Gains

1. The "Loss" of Russian Oil (High Costs and Risk):

While initially seen as a bargain, Russian oil became increasingly costly due to, ironically, its own success.

Sanctions Pressure: Tightening U.S. and European sanctions on major Russian producers made it harder for Indian refiners to manage compliance risks.

Rising Costs: Shipping costs and insurance for Russian oil increased, and, by late 2025, the logistical nightmare was reducing the value of the "discount".

Tariff Penalties: The U.S. imposed a 25% tariff on Indian goods, specifically targeting India's continued purchase of Russian oil.

2. The "Gain" from Exports (Turning Oil into Opportunity):

India emerged as a crucial global supplier of refined products, with petroleum product exports touching record highs in 2025.

The Refinery Pivot: Indian refiners like Reliance Industries and MRPL, which possess sophisticated, flexible technology, moved away from relying solely on Russian feedstock to diversify their sources.

Record Exports: Despite sanctions, India managed to increase its refined product exports to the U.S. and Europe, benefiting from elevated refining margins caused by global supply disruptions.

Market Diversification: India utilized the shift to secure new export markets, with refined product exports to countries like the US and Australia growing, ensuring higher export revenue.

Precedents of Pragmatism

This is not the first time India has shifted its foreign policy based on changing economic realities:

1991 Economic Reforms: India abandoned its socialistic, Soviet-aligned economic model for liberalization following a balance-of-payments crisis.

The 2008 Civil Nuclear Deal: India moved away from its traditional non-aligned stance to develop a strategic partnership with the United States, prioritizing energy security.

2020 Border Standoff: Following the Galwan Valley clash, India immediately banned over 200 Chinese apps, demonstrating a willingness to sacrifice economic ties for national security interests, similar to the current decision to reduce reliance on Russian energy.

The New Narrative: "India-First"

The narrative surrounding this pivot is not one of "bowing to pressure," but of calculated, pragmatic sovereignty.

Energy Security: The government can argue that "securing energy" now means diversifying suppliers (USA, Venezuela, West Asia) rather than relying on a single, sanctioned source.

Economic Growth: By removing the 25% U.S. tariff, the move protects critical Indian industries like textiles and pharmaceuticals, which were threatened by the tariffs.

Geopolitical Balancing: The move keeps the U.S. relationship steady while allowing India to maintain a "friendship" with Russia, a vital defense partner, without being caught in the sanctions crossfire.

Prime Minister Modi’s agreement to halt Russian oil imports represents a masterful, albeit sudden, recalibration of India's foreign and economic policy. By recognizing that the "loss" of cheaper oil was becoming a greater financial burden—due to trade tariffs and sanction risks—than the "gain" from refined exports, the administration has chosen to pivot towards the U.S. and diversified energy sources. This move, echoing historical precedents of pragmatic decision-making, reasserts India's role as a sovereign, self-interested global power, maneuvering through the complexities of a new cold war to secure its economic future.

Understanding the 2026 Indian Inflation Outlook: Distinguishing Base Effects from True Demand.....

Introduction The trajectory of inflation in India approaching 2026 is uniquely poised to be dictated by statistical mechanics rather tha...