measures for food inflation

Re: mearures for food inflation

subsidy is not a remedy....we need to increase the flow of money that is accumulated
 
Re: mearures for food inflation

Inflation means increasing rate of price of products. In order to control govt. can provide subsidy to people, so that burden of inflation cannot affect common people.
Thus, for people real inflation (inflation rate - subsidy) becomes low.
 
Re: mearures for food inflation

The divergence between alternative inflation measures complicates the conduct of monetary policy in India. It is important to have a robust primary measure of inflation at the national level.
 
Re: mearures for food inflation

Following are the some ways to reduce inflation:
Monetary policy
Fiscal policy
wage control
monetarism
Supply side policies.
 
Re: mearures for food inflation

monetary policy and fiscal policy are the major measures of inflation control
 
Re: mearures for food inflation

There are a number of things consumers can do to combat inflationary food prices. Smart shopping for nutritious food at good prices is key. Look at your family's diet. Cut out high-cost, non-nutritious and high-fat snacks and sugary sodas. Buying food items in bulk at food warehouse outlets can also help combat high food prices. Budget your food purchasing and plan a menu. Making a list before grocery shopping can help you resist the temptation of impulse buying. Take an inventory of food items you have on hand and buy only what you need. Buying store brands or generic brands can also save you money. If you find a food item on sale that you use frequently, take the opportunity to stock up. Using these food-buying tips will save you money in the long-run and help stretch your money when looking for ways to combat inflationary food prices.
 
Start a crackdown on hoarders & black marketers and allow open market sales to prevent prices from rising further; this will not bring down prices overnight but would go a long way in ensuring better returns.
 
According to the Labor Department, customer prices increased 1.8 percent in the first 11 months of 2012. That may not seem like a lot, but inflation adds up. Here are some things you are paying more for now than you did last year, regardless of stubbornly high unemployment and stagnant wages.
 
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