Education inflation as per the graphic is 3.5 percent and medical inflation is 3.9 percent. This is completely botched data and can’t be relied upon as in reality the fees are rising consistently by 10 percent every year for past 4 years and are to be expected to rise by 10 percent indefinitely as has been told by the schools and this is the max allowed by the government policy so the yield are conveying a real picture data is falsified.
Also medical inflation is a joke in this data set where private hospitals are charging exorbitant rates so much so that even the insurance companies are flabbergasted by the rates being charged. I think nothing is reliable in our country anymore.
The disconnect between actual inflation and household expectations is fasinating. Real yields are sky-high because people still think prices are rising fast, even though inflation is nearly zero. This creates a wierd situation where borrowing costs stay elevated despite the data saying otherwise. The RBI's communication challenge here is huge, they need to bridge that gap without looking like they're overreacting to one lucky quarter of good harvests and GST cuts.
Your explanation of the steel sector’s outlook was very clear and well-structured. Non-ferrous metal companies have also been performing well recently. Please include them in the daily brief as well.
Education inflation as per the graphic is 3.5 percent and medical inflation is 3.9 percent. This is completely botched data and can’t be relied upon as in reality the fees are rising consistently by 10 percent every year for past 4 years and are to be expected to rise by 10 percent indefinitely as has been told by the schools and this is the max allowed by the government policy so the yield are conveying a real picture data is falsified.
Also medical inflation is a joke in this data set where private hospitals are charging exorbitant rates so much so that even the insurance companies are flabbergasted by the rates being charged. I think nothing is reliable in our country anymore.
The disconnect between actual inflation and household expectations is fasinating. Real yields are sky-high because people still think prices are rising fast, even though inflation is nearly zero. This creates a wierd situation where borrowing costs stay elevated despite the data saying otherwise. The RBI's communication challenge here is huge, they need to bridge that gap without looking like they're overreacting to one lucky quarter of good harvests and GST cuts.
Your explanation of the steel sector’s outlook was very clear and well-structured. Non-ferrous metal companies have also been performing well recently. Please include them in the daily brief as well.
Thank you!
Please discuss the acquisitions of companies good ones . It will be informative and interesting to learn