(base: 1993-94=100) (For week ended on 22nd July 2006)
The official Wholesale Price Index for 'All Commodities' (Base: 1993-94 = 100) for the week ended 22nd July 2006 rose by 0.2 percent to 204.1 (Provisional) from 203.7 (Provisional) for the previous week.
The annual rate of inflation, calculated on point-to-point basis, stood at 4.67 percent (Provisional) for the week ended 22/07/2006 (over 23/07/2005) as compared to 4.52 percent (Provisional) for the previous week and 4.33 percent during the corresponding week of the previous year.
The movement of the index for the various commodity groups is summarized below:-
1. Primary Articles (Weight 22.02%)
The index for this major group rose by 0.3 percent to 203.4 (Provisional) from 202.7 (Provisional) for the previous week. The groups and items for which the index showed variations during the week are as follows:-
The index for 'Food Articles' group rose by 0.6 percent to 204.8 (Provisional) from 203.6 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of poultry chicken (12%), fruits & vegetables (2%) and masur, urad, gram and eggs (1% each).
The index for 'Non-Food Articles' group declined by 0.3 percent to 184.1 (Provisional) from 184.6 (Provisional) for the previous week due to lower prices of logs & timber (11%), raw rubber and fodder (2% each) and gingerly seed, soybean and raw jute (1% each). However, the prices of groundnut seed (3%) and rape & mustard seed (1%) moved up.
The index for this major group rose by 0.3 percent to 327.4 (Provisional) from 326.3 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of naphtha (4%), furnace oil (2%) and bitumen (1%).
3. Manufactured Products (Weight 63.75%)
The index for this major group rose by 0.1 percent to 176.8 (Provisional) from 176.7 (Provisional) for the previous week. The groups and items for which the index showed variations during the week are as follows:-
The index for 'Food Products' group rose by 0.2 percent to 180.4 (Provisional) from 180.0 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of rice bran oil and imported edible oil (4% each), rape & mustard oil, groundnut oil, biscuits and cattle feed (2% each) and coffee powder, coconut oil, sugar & sweet meat confectionery, cotton seed oil and ghee (1% each).
The index for 'Textiles' group rose by 0.2 percent to 130.3 (Provisional) from 130.0 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of polyster yarn and texturised yarn (2% each) and viscose filament yarn (1%).
The index for 'Rubber & Plastic Products' group rose by 0.1 percent to 144.7 (Provisional) from 144.6 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of decorative laminates (3%).
The index for 'Chemicals & Chemical Products' group declined by 0.6 percent to 195.3 (Provisional) from 196.4 (Provisional) for the previous week due to lower prices of pesticides (29%). However, the prices of liquid oral other than vitamins, soda ash (sodium carbonate) and hair oil (1% each) moved up.
The index for 'Non-Metallic Mineral Products' group declined by 0.1 percent to 188.8 (Provisional) from 188.9 (Provisional) for the previous week due to marginal decline in the prices of cement.
The index for 'Basic Metals Alloys & Metal Products' group rose by 0.6 percent to 228.0 (Provisional) from 226.6 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of skelps (9%), oromild steel & tensile plates (8%), cr coils (7%), cr sheets (5%) and wire(all kinds) (4%). However, the prices of zinc ingots (4%) and lead ingots (2%) declined.
The index for 'Machinery & Machine Tools' group rose by 0.1 percent to 152.4 (Provisional) from 152.2 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of complete tractors (1%).
The index for 'Transport Equipment & Parts' group rose by 0.1 percent to 161.1 (Provisional) from 161.0 (Provisional) for the previous week due to higher prices of broad gauge diesel locomotives (3%).
With a traumatic implosion – economic, financial, political, and social – now taking place in Greece, we should expect heated debate about who is to blame for the country's deepening misery. There are four suspects – all of them involved in the spectacular boom that preceded what will prove to be an even more remarkable bust.
Read more
Non-Executive Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia. Lecturer at Yale University's School of Management and Jackson Institute for Global Affairs. Author of "The Next Asia".
Eric J. Gleacher Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago. IMF’s Chief Economist from September 2003 to January 2007. Inaugural recipient of the Fischer Black Prize.
CEO and co-CIO of PIMCO. Served as President and CEO of the Harvard Management Company for 2 years, while also working at the IMF for 15 years. In 2008, his book "When Markets Collide", won the Financial Times award for Business Book of The Year in addition to being named as the one of the best business books of all time by The Independent.
Got something to say about the economy? We want to hear from you. Submit your article contributions and participate in the world's largest independent online economics community today!