India’s inflation is less a monetary phenomenon and more a structural challenge. Analyse the underlying structural drivers of inflation in India. Evaluate why monetary tools alone cannot stabilise prices.
Kartavya Desk Staff
Topic: Unemployment
Topic: Unemployment
Q6. India’s inflation is less a monetary phenomenon and more a structural challenge. Analyse the underlying structural drivers of inflation in India. Evaluate why monetary tools alone cannot stabilise prices. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Easy
Reference: InsightsIAS
Why the question Inflation in India has remained high despite monetary tightening, raising concerns that deeper structural factors are driving price pressures rather than excess liquidity alone. Key demand of the question The question expects an analysis of the structural drivers of inflation in India and an evaluation of why monetary policy alone cannot control these pressures, while addressing the statement given. Structure of the answer: Introduction Give a short context on India’s inflation behaving differently due to high food weight, supply rigidities or structural features of the economy. Body Briefly state the main structural drivers shaping inflation in India such as supply constraints, food-weight issues, energy dependence or labour-market rigidities. State why monetary policy tools alone cannot manage such structurally driven inflation and how they have limited impact on supply-side shocks. Conclusion Close by stressing the need for a combined structural and monetary approach for durable inflation stability.
Why the question Inflation in India has remained high despite monetary tightening, raising concerns that deeper structural factors are driving price pressures rather than excess liquidity alone.
Key demand of the question The question expects an analysis of the structural drivers of inflation in India and an evaluation of why monetary policy alone cannot control these pressures, while addressing the statement given.
Structure of the answer:
Introduction Give a short context on India’s inflation behaving differently due to high food weight, supply rigidities or structural features of the economy.
• Briefly state the main structural drivers shaping inflation in India such as supply constraints, food-weight issues, energy dependence or labour-market rigidities.
• State why monetary policy tools alone cannot manage such structurally driven inflation and how they have limited impact on supply-side shocks.
Conclusion Close by stressing the need for a combined structural and monetary approach for durable inflation stability.