Rs 7 crore GST fraud unearthed in UP’s Pilibhit; 13 fictitious firms detected

Rs 7 crore GST fraud unearthed in UP’s Pilibhit; 13 fictitious firms detectedGSTDated:- 17-4-2026PTIPilibhit (UP), Apr 17 (PTI) An alleged fraud involving misuse of a GST ID to misappropriate funds worth around Rs 7 crore has been uncovered here, with …

Rs 7 crore GST fraud unearthed in UP's Pilibhit; 13 fictitious firms detected
GST
Dated:- 17-4-2026
PTI
Pilibhit (UP), Apr 17 (PTI) An alleged fraud involving misuse of a GST ID to misappropriate funds worth around Rs 7 crore has been uncovered here, with police detecting 13 fake firms which were allegedly used to generate bogus bills, officials said on Friday.

According to police, the accused allegedly duped a local businessman on the pretext of arranging a bank loan and obtained his GST credentials before carrying out the fraudulent transactions.

The complainant, Mohammad Naeem, a resident of Mohalla Chhota Khudaganj and proprietor of Shahji Enterprises, runs a handpump installation and labour services business.

In

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Advisory on Re-Computation of Interest under Table 5.1 of GSTR-3B

Advisory on Re-Computation of Interest under Table 5.1 of GSTR-3BGSTDated:- 17-4-20261. As a facilitation measure for taxpayers and assisting the taxpayers in doing a correct self-assessment, GST Portal auto-calculates interest on delayed filing of GST…

Advisory on Re-Computation of Interest under Table 5.1 of GSTR-3B
GST
Dated:- 17-4-2026

1. As a facilitation measure for taxpayers and assisting the taxpayers in doing a correct self-assessment, GST Portal auto-calculates interest on delayed filing of GSTR-3B based on the tax liability discharged and tax liability breakup provided in “Tax Liability Breakup, As Applicable” table.

2. This system computed interest is auto-populated and collected in the Table-5.1 of the subsequent period GSTR-3B. The facility is similar to the collection of late fees for GSTR-3B, which is also calculated after filing of GSTR-3B and collected in subsequent GSTR-3B period.

3. The detailed breakup of interest computation can be verified from the

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ided under Table 5.1 of GSTR-3B. Upon clicking this option, the system recalculates the interest based on the latest and updated parameters available in the system and the revised interest amount will then be reflected in the updated system generated GSTR-3B PDF.

5. Taxpayers are advised to refer to the updated GSTR-3B system generated PDF for the revised interest values and accordingly, update the interest figures in Table 5.1 by manually editing the already auto-populated values in Table 5.1. The revised interest will also be visible on hover of respective field in Table 5.1 of GSTR-3B. Kindly note that the manually edited interest value shall not be less than the recomputed interest appearing in system generated GSTR-3B pdf.

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Section 76 cannot justify double taxation where GST collected was already paid through another registration.

Section 76 cannot justify double taxation where GST collected was already paid through another registration.Case-LawsGSTA writ petition against a show cause notice was entertained because the matter had been pending for years, pleadings were complete, …

Section 76 cannot justify double taxation where GST collected was already paid through another registration.
Case-Laws
GST
A writ petition against a show cause notice was entertained because the matter had been pending for years, pleadings were complete, no further factual enquiry was needed, and the notice itself showed that the amount collected as GST matched the amount paid to the Government. On those admitted facts, the Court treated the issue as a pure question of law on the scope of Section 76 of the CGST Act and held that the provision could not be used to demand tax again merely because payment was made through another GST registration of the same assessee in the same State. Section 76 targets non-remittance of tax collected, not double taxation where the revenue has already received the amount.
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Writ jurisdiction in tax disputes is barred when natural justice is satisfied and a statutory appeal is available.

Writ jurisdiction in tax disputes is barred when natural justice is satisfied and a statutory appeal is available.Case-LawsGSTA writ petition in a tax matter was held not maintainable where the adjudicating authority had considered the taxpayer’s reply…

Writ jurisdiction in tax disputes is barred when natural justice is satisfied and a statutory appeal is available.
Case-Laws
GST
A writ petition in a tax matter was held not maintainable where the adjudicating authority had considered the taxpayer's reply, written submissions, annexures, invoices, classification plea, exemption claim and valuation objections. The Court found no breach of natural justice because adequate opportunity of hearing had been given and the impugned order dealt with the material on record while partly confirming and partly dropping the demand. As the dispute involved detailed factual and legal examination, the petitioner was directed to pursue the statutory appellate remedy, where all grounds could be raised. The writ petition was dismissed, with liberty to file an appeal on complying with the statutory deposit requirement.
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Proper officer jurisdiction upheld for penalty on fraudulent ITC, with procedural defects treated as curable under the CGST Act.

Proper officer jurisdiction upheld for penalty on fraudulent ITC, with procedural defects treated as curable under the CGST Act.Case-LawsGSTA Joint Commissioner who had issued the show-cause notice before a later circular could validly pass the Order-i…

Proper officer jurisdiction upheld for penalty on fraudulent ITC, with procedural defects treated as curable under the CGST Act.
Case-Laws
GST
A Joint Commissioner who had issued the show-cause notice before a later circular could validly pass the Order-in-Original imposing penalty for fraudulent availment and passing of ITC, since the proceedings had been initiated under Section 74 and the same officer had jurisdiction on the date of adjudication. The Court held that Section 160 of the CGST Act cured mere procedural defects or omissions where the proceedings were otherwise in substance in conformity with the Act. It also noted that the petitioner had not effectively contested jurisdiction at the notice stage or participated in the proceedings, so the objection was untenable. The writ challenge failed, with liberty to pursue the statutory appeal.
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Section 79 recovery notice upheld where the proper officer acted and no separate prior notice was required after final assessment.

Section 79 recovery notice upheld where the proper officer acted and no separate prior notice was required after final assessment.Case-LawsGSTSection 79 permits recovery of tax dues from third parties without any separate statutory requirement of prior…

Section 79 recovery notice upheld where the proper officer acted and no separate prior notice was required after final assessment.
Case-Laws
GST
Section 79 permits recovery of tax dues from third parties without any separate statutory requirement of prior authorization before recovery proceedings are initiated. The High Court found that the jurisdictional Deputy Assistant Commissioner (ST) was the notified proper officer under the Gazette notification, so the notice could not be challenged for want of competence. It also held that once the assessment order had attained finality, no further prior notice to the dealer was required before issuing a garnishee notice to the bank. The recovery notice was therefore lawful and the writ petition was dismissed.
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Natural justice bars GST recovery from a relative without prior liability determination and hearing, HC quashes bank attachment.

Natural justice bars GST recovery from a relative without prior liability determination and hearing, HC quashes bank attachment.Case-LawsGSTRecovery of GST dues from a deceased taxpayer’s relative cannot be effected without prior determination that the…

Natural justice bars GST recovery from a relative without prior liability determination and hearing, HC quashes bank attachment.
Case-Laws
GST
Recovery of GST dues from a deceased taxpayer's relative cannot be effected without prior determination that the relative is liable under Section 93, after notice and an opportunity of hearing. Where the petitioner and the deceased had separate GST registrations and distinct places of business, mere similarity of trade name was insufficient to justify automatic recovery. Freezing a bank account without adjudicatory process and without inviting objections also breached natural justice and due process, since attachment of bank property is a drastic measure requiring tangible material and a formed opinion. The HC held the recovery action suffered from a jurisdictional defect, quashed the attachment, directed de-freezing of the account, and left the Department free to proceed afresh in accordance with law.
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Binding advance rulings defeated GST exemption claim for frozen meat supply, securing reimbursement of tax paid.

Binding advance rulings defeated GST exemption claim for frozen meat supply, securing reimbursement of tax paid.Case-LawsGSTThe HC held that exemption under Notification No. 2/2017 did not apply to the petitioner’s supply of frozen meat, because the Ra…

Binding advance rulings defeated GST exemption claim for frozen meat supply, securing reimbursement of tax paid.
Case-Laws
GST
The HC held that exemption under Notification No. 2/2017 did not apply to the petitioner's supply of frozen meat, because the Rajasthan Authority for Advance Ruling and the appellate authority had already determined that the goods were supplied in unit containers and attracted GST at five per cent. Those advance rulings were binding on the petitioner under Section 103 of the CGST Act, so it was required to pay the tax accordingly. As the respondents rejected reimbursement only on the mistaken assumption that the supplies were exempt, there was no legal basis to deny reimbursement of the GST already paid. The petitioner was entitled to reimbursement of the balance GST amount, with interest payable on default.
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Additional evidence in appeal must be examined under Rule 112 before rejection of the appeal.

Additional evidence in appeal must be examined under Rule 112 before rejection of the appeal.Case-LawsGSTThe appellate authority misread Rule 112 by treating production of additional evidence in appeal as unavailable, without examining whether the case…

Additional evidence in appeal must be examined under Rule 112 before rejection of the appeal.
Case-Laws
GST
The appellate authority misread Rule 112 by treating production of additional evidence in appeal as unavailable, without examining whether the case fell within clauses (a) to (d) of sub-rule (1). The High Court held that the petitioner's contentions on the admissibility of additional evidence required consideration, and that the matter could also have been remanded to the original authority if factual examination was necessary. Because the substantive grounds and additional evidence were not considered under Rule 112, the appellate order could not stand. The order was set aside and the appeal remanded for fresh decision, with all contentions left open.
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Natural justice in GST adjudication: ex parte order on factual discrepancies set aside, with fresh hearing directed.

Natural justice in GST adjudication: ex parte order on factual discrepancies set aside, with fresh hearing directed.Case-LawsGSTHC set aside an ex parte adjudication under Section 73 where the show cause notice raised factual disputes on return mismatc…

Natural justice in GST adjudication: ex parte order on factual discrepancies set aside, with fresh hearing directed.
Case-Laws
GST
HC set aside an ex parte adjudication under Section 73 where the show cause notice raised factual disputes on return mismatches, excess input tax credit, supplier default, delayed tax payment and related interest. It held that the petitioner had to be heard on merits before such discrepancies were decided, especially where the petitioner claimed material existed to rebut the alleged defaults. Because allowing the order to stand would cause serious financial prejudice, the matter was remitted for fresh adjudication after affording an opportunity to respond, and the consequential bank attachment was directed to be withdrawn.
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Statutory right of appeal protected against coercive recovery pending expiry of the appeal period and pre-deposit requirements.

Statutory right of appeal protected against coercive recovery pending expiry of the appeal period and pre-deposit requirements.Case-LawsGSTCoercive recovery could not be used to defeat a subsisting statutory right of appeal where the appeal period unde…

Statutory right of appeal protected against coercive recovery pending expiry of the appeal period and pre-deposit requirements.
Case-Laws
GST
Coercive recovery could not be used to defeat a subsisting statutory right of appeal where the appeal period under the Act and the relevant notification had not expired. The High Court protected the petitioner from recovery because the petitioner stated an intention to file an appeal with a stay application within the available period; if the appeal is filed, the statutory pre-deposit requirement of 10% would apply and recovery would not be pursued in any event. The petition was disposed of with liberty to the Department to recover dues in accordance with law if no appeal is filed, while all merits were kept open.
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Composite assessment orders for multiple financial years are unsustainable; separate proceedings must be initiated for each assessment year.

Composite assessment orders for multiple financial years are unsustainable; separate proceedings must be initiated for each assessment year.Case-LawsGSTA single show-cause notice or composite assessment order cannot validly cover more than one tax peri…

Composite assessment orders for multiple financial years are unsustainable; separate proceedings must be initiated for each assessment year.
Case-Laws
GST
A single show-cause notice or composite assessment order cannot validly cover more than one tax period once the due date for filing the annual return has been reached. Applying an earlier Division Bench view, the HC held that the impugned assessment, framed by one order for multiple financial years, was unsustainable and set it aside. The matter was remitted with liberty to commence fresh proceedings separately for each assessment year, and the intervening period was excluded for limitation purposes. All other grounds raised by the petitioner were left open.
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Unsigned assessment order invalid; defective service defeats delay objection and fresh reassessment may follow after due notice.

Unsigned assessment order invalid; defective service defeats delay objection and fresh reassessment may follow after due notice.Case-LawsGSTAn unsigned assessment order is invalid, because the assessing officer’s signature is mandatory and Sections 160…

Unsigned assessment order invalid; defective service defeats delay objection and fresh reassessment may follow after due notice.
Case-Laws
GST
An unsigned assessment order is invalid, because the assessing officer's signature is mandatory and Sections 160 and 169 of the CGST Act do not cure that defect. Service of an unsigned order cannot be treated as valid service under Rule 26(3) of the CGST Rules, so an objection based on delay in filing the writ petition failed. The impugned assessment order was set aside, liberty was reserved to complete a fresh assessment after due notice and with a duly signed order, and the intervening period was directed to be excluded for limitation.
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GST input tax credit distribution through tax invoices was permitted for reverse charge common services during the disputed period.

GST input tax credit distribution through tax invoices was permitted for reverse charge common services during the disputed period.Case-LawsGSTUnder the unamended GST framework, an Input Service Distributor could not procure and distribute credit relat…

GST input tax credit distribution through tax invoices was permitted for reverse charge common services during the disputed period.
Case-Laws
GST
Under the unamended GST framework, an Input Service Distributor could not procure and distribute credit relating to common services liable to reverse charge through the ISD route, because the then-existing definition barred such procurement. The later Finance Act, 2024 remedy applies only from 01.04.2025, so it did not govern the disputed period. For that period, the CBIC circular of 17.07.2023 clarified that common credit need not be routed only through ISD and could also be transferred by tax invoice under Section 31. As the taxpayer had used ISD for forward charge credit and tax invoices for reverse charge common credit, and had availed only eligible credit, the contrary order was quashed.
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GST notice visibility after portal upgrade upheld; writ not entertained, but conditional reconsideration allowed on deposit and reply.

GST notice visibility after portal upgrade upheld; writ not entertained, but conditional reconsideration allowed on deposit and reply.Case-LawsGSTThe HC refused to quash an ex parte GST adjudication order where the assessee had neither replied to the s…

GST notice visibility after portal upgrade upheld; writ not entertained, but conditional reconsideration allowed on deposit and reply.
Case-Laws
GST
The HC refused to quash an ex parte GST adjudication order where the assessee had neither replied to the show cause notice nor filed a statutory appeal within limitation. It accepted that, after the portal upgrade on 16.01.2024, notices uploaded under the “Additional Notices and Orders” tab were visible, so earlier decisions on non-visibility were inapplicable. The writ petition was therefore not entertained on the alleged notice defect, the Section 107 appellate remedy being the ordinary course. However, because the appeal period had expired during pendency of the writ, the Court granted a conditional opportunity to file a reply and seek reconsideration upon deposit of 50% of the tax and penalty, excluding interest.
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Efficacious appellate remedy bars writ review in GST demand disputes where factual issues require statutory appeal.

Efficacious appellate remedy bars writ review in GST demand disputes where factual issues require statutory appeal.Case-LawsGSTExistence of an efficacious statutory appeal under the CGST Act justified refusal of writ jurisdiction against GST adjudicati…

Efficacious appellate remedy bars writ review in GST demand disputes where factual issues require statutory appeal.
Case-Laws
GST
Existence of an efficacious statutory appeal under the CGST Act justified refusal of writ jurisdiction against GST adjudication orders passed by municipal bodies. The Court found that the challenge was not a case of lack of jurisdiction, because the alleged GST immunity depended on examination of the underlying transactions and the adjudicating authority had already undertaken that factual exercise. As no exceptional circumstance, including a vires challenge, was shown, the petitioners were relegated to the appellate remedy. Appeals filed within the time granted and with statutory compliances were to be heard on merits without objection on limitation, and all substantive contentions were left open.
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Personal hearing and statutory appeal under GST: writ challenge failed where no reply was filed and no hearing was sought.

Personal hearing and statutory appeal under GST: writ challenge failed where no reply was filed and no hearing was sought.Case-LawsGSTUnder Section 75(4), a personal hearing is required on demand; because the taxpayer did not file a reply to the show-c…

Personal hearing and statutory appeal under GST: writ challenge failed where no reply was filed and no hearing was sought.
Case-Laws
GST
Under Section 75(4), a personal hearing is required on demand; because the taxpayer did not file a reply to the show-cause notice and never sought a hearing, the HC held there was no breach of natural justice. The Court also held that the summary GST demand order issued in DRC-07 under Section 73 was appealable under the statute, so objections on merits or technical grounds should have been raised before the appellate authority. Having failed to participate in the proceedings and let the appeal period lapse, the taxpayer could not invoke writ jurisdiction. The writ petition was dismissed.
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Composite GST assessment for multiple years is impermissible; year-wise proceedings required and fresh action permitted with limitation exclusion.

Composite GST assessment for multiple years is impermissible; year-wise proceedings required and fresh action permitted with limitation exclusion.Case-LawsGSTAssessment proceedings under the GST enactments must be confined to the relevant tax period, a…

Composite GST assessment for multiple years is impermissible; year-wise proceedings required and fresh action permitted with limitation exclusion.
Case-Laws
GST
Assessment proceedings under the GST enactments must be confined to the relevant tax period, and a single composite show cause notice or composite assessment order for multiple assessment years is impermissible. Following prior High Court authority, the court held that the impugned DRC-01 notice and assessment order, both framed on a combined basis, were unsustainable; separate issuance of DRC-07 did not cure the defect. The composite assessment order was set aside, and the respondents were given liberty to initiate fresh year-wise proceedings. The period from the impugned order until receipt of the court's order was directed to be excluded for limitation purposes.
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Refund of appellate pre-deposit must follow Rule 89, not Section 54, and cannot be withheld on a non-existent investigation.

Refund of appellate pre-deposit must follow Rule 89, not Section 54, and cannot be withheld on a non-existent investigation.Case-LawsGSTRefund of a statutory pre-deposit made for filing an appeal under Section 107(6) was held not to be governed by Sect…

Refund of appellate pre-deposit must follow Rule 89, not Section 54, and cannot be withheld on a non-existent investigation.
Case-Laws
GST
Refund of a statutory pre-deposit made for filing an appeal under Section 107(6) was held not to be governed by Section 54, because such deposit does not assume the character of tax and falls within “any other amount” under Rule 89. The Court, following State of Jharkhand v. M/s. BLA Infrastructure Private Limited, found that reliance on Section 54, a restrictive reading of Rule 89, and Section 56 to deny refund was misplaced, and the claim could not be rejected as time-barred or otherwise non-maintainable on that basis. It also held that withholding refund on the basis of a supposed pending SFIO investigation was unsustainable once it was shown that no investigation was pending.
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Natural justice in ex parte adjudication requires proved service of hearing notices before an appellate order can stand.

Natural justice in ex parte adjudication requires proved service of hearing notices before an appellate order can stand.Case-LawsGSTFailure to establish service of hearing notices before ex parte appellate adjudication amounted to a violation of natura…

Natural justice in ex parte adjudication requires proved service of hearing notices before an appellate order can stand.
Case-Laws
GST
Failure to establish service of hearing notices before ex parte appellate adjudication amounted to a violation of natural justice. The Court accepted that the assessee had been deprived of an effective opportunity of hearing because the record did not clearly show service of the relevant intimations, and some documents were not traceable. On that procedural defect alone, without examining the tax dispute on merits, the impugned appellate order was set aside and the appeal was restored for fresh adjudication after granting due opportunity of hearing.
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Personal hearing under Section 75(4) is mandatory before adverse adjudication; absence of hearing vitiates the order.

Personal hearing under Section 75(4) is mandatory before adverse adjudication; absence of hearing vitiates the order.Case-LawsGSTSection 75(4) requires a personal hearing before an adverse adjudication order is passed, and that statutory obligation is …

Personal hearing under Section 75(4) is mandatory before adverse adjudication; absence of hearing vitiates the order.
Case-Laws
GST
Section 75(4) requires a personal hearing before an adverse adjudication order is passed, and that statutory obligation is not displaced merely because no written reply was filed. The Court found that the show cause notice and reminder marked personal hearing as not applicable, so no hearing was actually granted. It held that denial of hearing violated both the statutory mandate and natural justice, rendering the adjudication/assessment order vitiated. The order was set aside, with liberty to proceed afresh in accordance with law, including compliance with Section 75(4).
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Electronic Credit Ledger blocking under Rule 86A(3) lapses automatically after one year, requiring immediate unblocking.

Electronic Credit Ledger blocking under Rule 86A(3) lapses automatically after one year, requiring immediate unblocking.Case-LawsGSTRule 86A(3) limits blocking of the Electronic Credit Ledger to one year from the date of imposition, and any continuance…

Electronic Credit Ledger blocking under Rule 86A(3) lapses automatically after one year, requiring immediate unblocking.
Case-Laws
GST
Rule 86A(3) limits blocking of the Electronic Credit Ledger to one year from the date of imposition, and any continuance beyond that period is contrary to the rule. Where the ledger blocking had continued after expiry of twelve months, the restriction was treated as having automatically ceased to operate. The Court declared the continued blocking illegal and directed the authorities to unblock the Electronic Credit Ledger forthwith.
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Natural justice breached by non-service of notice, leading to quashing of assessment and recovery proceedings.

Natural justice breached by non-service of notice, leading to quashing of assessment and recovery proceedings.Case-LawsGSTAssessment and recovery proceedings were held invalid because service of notice was not proved and the assessee was denied an effe…

Natural justice breached by non-service of notice, leading to quashing of assessment and recovery proceedings.
Case-Laws
GST
Assessment and recovery proceedings were held invalid because service of notice was not proved and the assessee was denied an effective opportunity of hearing, amounting to breach of natural justice. The Court found that the postal notice was returned unserved and the alleged e-mail did not establish effective service, so no notice was served before or after the assessment order. The impugned assessment order and consequential recovery proceedings were therefore quashed, and the matter was remanded to the assessing authority for fresh assessment after due notice and opportunity to respond, with exclusion of the intervening period for limitation.
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WPI inflation rises to 38-month high of 3.88 pc in March on higher fuel prices amid West Asia crisis

WPI inflation rises to 38-month high of 3.88 pc in March on higher fuel prices amid West Asia crisisGSTDated:- 15-4-2026PTINew Delhi, Apr 15 (PTI) Wholesale price inflation rose sharply to an over 3-year high of 3.88 per cent in March, driven by a shar…

WPI inflation rises to 38-month high of 3.88 pc in March on higher fuel prices amid West Asia crisis
GST
Dated:- 15-4-2026
PTI
New Delhi, Apr 15 (PTI) Wholesale price inflation rose sharply to an over 3-year high of 3.88 per cent in March, driven by a sharp spike in rates of fuel, power and manufactured items amid the West Asia crisis.

Government data released on Wednesday showed that the Wholesale Price Index (WPI)-based inflation rose for the fifth straight month in March as core inflation accelerated, amid softening of primary food items. As higher energy prices eventually generalise to other commodity prices, we expect WPI inflation to rise further in the coming months.

The high WPI inflation in March reflects elevat

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e previous month.

Manufactured products inflation rose to 3.39 per cent in March, from 2.92 per cent in February.

Barclays, in a research note, said that March WPI is the sharpest month-on-month increase seen since August 2023.

“As global energy prices stay elevated and eventually trickle to other commodity prices, we expect WPI inflation to rise further going ahead,” Barclays said, adding that it expects RBI to persist with a pause in interest rates through 2026.

During March, the pace of hike in food articles prices, however, eased to 1.90 per cent, from 2.19 per cent in February.

In vegetables, inflation softened to 1.45 per cent in March, against 4.73 per cent in February.

WPI inflation in FY26 averaged at 0.7 pe

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l to ensure that fuel retailers do not pass on the higher crude oil price to consumers.

The excise duty cut decision was taken in response to the steep and rapid rise in international crude oil prices, which had surged from approximately USD 70 per barrel to around USD 122 per barrel over the month — an increase of nearly 75 per cent in under four weeks, driven by the ongoing conflict in West Asia and associated disruptions to global energy supply chains.

Consumer price index-based retail inflation rose 3.4 per cent in March compared to 3.21 per cent in the preceding month, mainly due to an uptick in certain food items, data released earlier this week showed.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in its first bi-monthly monetary pol

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Wholesale price inflation rises 3.88 pc in March on surge in crude rates

Wholesale price inflation rises 3.88 pc in March on surge in crude ratesGSTDated:- 15-4-2026PTINew Delhi, Apr 15 (PTI) Wholesale price inflation rose for the fifth straight month, at 3.88 per cent in March, driven by a sharp spike in rates of fuel, pow…

Wholesale price inflation rises 3.88 pc in March on surge in crude rates
GST
Dated:- 15-4-2026
PTI
New Delhi, Apr 15 (PTI) Wholesale price inflation rose for the fifth straight month, at 3.88 per cent in March, driven by a sharp spike in rates of fuel, power and manufactured items amid the West Asia crisis, government data showed on Wednesday.

Wholesale Price Index (WPI)-based inflation was 2.13 per cent in the previous month and 2.25 per cent in March last year.

“Positive rate of inflation in March 2026 is primarily due to increase in prices of crude petroleum & natural gas, other manufacturing, non-food articles, manufacture of basic metals and food articles, etc.,” the industry ministry said in a statement.

Accord

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ent since the crisis began on February 28.

The government, on March 26, reduced excise duty by Rs 10 per litre on both petrol and diesel to ensure that fuel retailers do not pass the higher crude oil price to consumers.

The excise duty cut decision was taken in response to the steep and rapid rise in international crude oil prices, which had surged from approximately USD 70 per barrel to around USD 122 per barrel over the month — an increase of nearly 75 per cent in under four weeks, driven by the ongoing conflict in West Asia and associated disruptions to global energy supply chains.

Consumer price index-based retail inflation rose 3.4 per cent in March compared to 3.21 per cent in the preceding month, mainly due to an uptick

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