The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– May 14, 2021; Day 61
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Today we have collated the 10 tricky words/phrases/terms from the editorial on the latest retail inflation and industrial output data. Go through these words and see how many did you know already. Check their usage as well. This will surely help you to understand the sense the tricky words have conveyed in the editorial.

Difficult Word/ Phrase/ TermContextual Meaning/ Definition
Respite a short period of rest or relief from something difficult or unpleasant
Cast a pall on/over to give (something) an unhappy mood
Softer In a soft market/economy there are more goods for sale than there are people to buy them, so prices are usually low
Imputed (of a value) assigned to something by inference from the value of the products or processes to which it contributes; estimated
Index of Industrial Production an index which shows the growth rates in different industry groups of the economy in a stipulated period of time
Deflationary Relating to a decrease in the amount of available money or credit in an economy that causes prices to go down
Stubbornly in a manner that shows dogged determination not to change one’s attitude or position on something
Gauge estimate or determine the magnitude, amount, or volume of
Trajectory the way in which a process or event develops over a period of time
Haulagethe commercial transport of goods
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Temporary respite (a short period of rest or relief from something difficult or unpleasant): On latest retail inflation and industrial output data

Price stability must be maintained even as steps to boost demand are taken

The latest retail inflation and industrial output data from the National Statistical Office (NSO) offer some relief from the pall of gloom cast (cast a pall on/over means to give (something) an unhappy mood) by the relentless second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Provisional headline inflation slowed to a three-month low of 4.29% in April, helped by softer (In a soft market/economy there are more goods for sale than there are people to buy them, so prices are usually low) food prices and a statistical base effect. The rate using an imputed ((of a value) assigned to something by inference from the value of the products or processes to which it contributes; estimated) index for the year-earlier period was 7.22%. A separate NSO release showed March industrial output jumped by 22.4%, benefiting again from the fact that the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) (an index which shows the growth rates in different industry groups of the economy in a stipulated period of time) had posted an 18.7% contraction in March 2020, when the economy was halted by the start of a nationwide lockdown. A closer look at the inflation data reveals a substantial cooling in the prices of cereals, milk and milk products, vegetables, and pulses and products. While both cereals and vegetables saw a deflationary (relating to a decrease in the amount of available money or credit in an economy that causes prices to go down) trend widen to -2.96% and -14.2%, respectively, dairy products, which have the second-largest weight in the food and beverages category, also slid into deflation territory at -0.13%. And price gains in pulses, which had been bothering monetary policy makers by having been stubbornly (in a manner that shows dogged determination not to change one’s attitude or position on something) stuck in the double digits over an 18-month stretch, decelerated into single digits to reach a 20-month low of 7.51%. The combined impact slowed inflation across the food and beverages group by more than 250 basis points to 2.66%.

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Still, the same Consumer Price Index data also point to persistent price pressures that could potentially fan faster inflation in the coming months, especially at a time when the socio-economic burden of the crippling pandemic and the impact of the lockdown that several States are resorting to is yet to be fully gauged (estimate or determine the magnitude, amount, or volume of). Price gains in meat and fish quickened to 16.7% and was little changed at 10.6% in the case of eggs, while inflation in oils and fats accelerated almost 100 basis points to 25.9%. Transport and communication also remained in the double-digit range at 11.04%, despite benefiting from the virtual freeze in the pump prices of petroleum products that coincided with last month’s Assembly elections. Now, with global crude oil starting to firm again and local petrol and diesel prices resuming their upward trajectory (the way in which a process or event develops over a period of time), the prospect of haulage (the commercial transport of goods) costs — for transporting goods from factory and farm gates — rising in the near term is very real. Add to the mix rising international commodity prices and the outlook for inflation gets even more cloudy. Industrial production numbers may also provide cheer only for a limited period, aided in no small measure by output having cratered in the first few months of the last fiscal. IHS Markit’s PMI survey for April showed new orders and output having slowed to eight-month lows, and with the pandemic-triggered factory shutdowns threatening supply disruptions, industrial production and inflation face challenges. Policymakers must stay vigilant to ensure price stability even as measures to bolster demand are the need of the hour.

Hope you got to know some new words/phrases which will definitely be useful in the English section of upcoming competitive exams. Wishing you all the best for your preparation!

Want to improve your vocabulary further? Download the Lists of Word-Meanings of Previous Months here.

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