The dent due to rising petrol and diesel prices comes at a time when most households across the country are grappling with higher medical expenses due to the Covid pandemic and rising commodity prices
The steady rise in auto fuel (petrol and diesel) prices has not only fanned
inflation concerns over the past few months, but has also altered spending
patterns of consumers. A recent report by the economic wing of State
Bank of India (SBI) suggests that as consumers are spending more on fuel,
it is crowding out expenses on health.
“Our analysis of SBI card spends indicates that spend on
non-discretionary health expenditure has been substantially reduced to
accommodate increased expenditure on fuel. In fact such spending has more than
crowded out the spending on other non-discretionary items, like grocery and
utility services to such an extent that the demand for such products has
significantly declined,” wrote Dr. Soumya Kanti Ghosh, group chief economic
adviser at SBI in a July 13 note.
The share of non-discretionary spend on items like fuel,
according to SBI’s estimates, jumped to 75 per cent in June 2021 from 62 per
cent in March 2021. In April - May 2020, the non-discretionary share had
reached 84 per cent, data show.
The dent due to rising petrol
and diesel prices comes at a time when most households across the country
are grappling with higher medical expenses due to the Covid pandemic and rising
commodity prices that is sending their monthly budget haywire. As a result,
households have either curtailed their savings or had to dip into their savings
to meet expenses.
According to preliminary estimates by the Reserve Bank of
India (RBI), the household financial savings rate in the December 2020 quarter
(Q3-FY21) has come down to 8.2 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) from
21.0 per cent and 10.4 per cent in the previous two quarters.
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