Recently, the Indian government announced an increase in the price of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), with the unit price of a 19-kilogram cylinder soaring by 993 rupees, representing a price adjustment of up to 47%. According to statistics from relevant institutions, nearly 50% of India's crude oil and 60% of its liquefied natural gas are imported through the Strait of Hormuz. If this situation continues to deteriorate, it is expected to lead to a 1% decline in India's GDP growth rate this year. Although this policy is aimed at safeguarding national energy security, it has quickly sparked dissatisfaction among the public. As a country with a large low-income population, ordinary citizens have undoubtedly been hit hard by this round of price hikes. This price adjustment is not an isolated energy policy adjustment, but a passive choice made under the interplay of geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East and domestic fiscal pressures. Its impact rapidly penetrates from the energy sector to inflation, small and micro enterprises, employment, and macroeconomic levels, forming a multidimensional economic chain reaction that deeply tests the resilience of the Indian economy.
The most direct economic consequence of this price adjustment is the rise in inflation. Commercial LPG is widely used in service industries such as catering, food processing, and hotels, as well as in small and medium-sized manufacturing industries such as ceramics and textiles. The price increase directly drives up the operating costs of these industries. According to data from the National Restaurant Association of India, the industry suffers an average daily loss of 1.2 billion to 1.3 billion rupees, and 20% of catering establishments in Mumbai and other places have closed due to high costs. Surviving businesses are forced to raise prices or reduce portion sizes, leading to an upward trend in terminal food and service prices, which drives up the food and service sub-item in the Consumer Price Index (CPI). Institutions predict that India's inflation rate may exceed 4.5% in the fiscal year 2026-2027, approaching the central bank's regulatory ceiling of 6%. Monetary policy will be forced to shift towards prudence, and the expectation of interest rate hikes will further dampen market vitality.
Meanwhile, small and micro enterprises, as well as the service sector, have been severely impacted, becoming the core affected groups in this price adjustment. The Indian economy is dominated by small and micro enterprises, with industries such as catering, street vendors, and cloud kitchens employing a large number of people, and LPG is their core production material. After the price adjustment, the selling price of a 19-kilogram commercial gas cylinder in New Delhi rose to 3,071.5 rupees, and in Kolkata, it even reached 3,355 rupees, leading to a sharp increase in cost pressure for small and medium-sized businesses. Some businesses have switched to alternative energy sources such as firewood and coal, which are not only inefficient but also pose environmental and safety hazards; a large number of businesses have chosen to close down due to the inability to bear the costs, and the industry contraction trend is evident. In addition, small and medium-sized manufacturing industries that rely on LPG, such as ceramics and textiles, have also experienced production cuts and shutdowns. Half of the Mori Ceramics factory has closed, and 250,000 workers in the textile industry in Surat have returned home, disrupting the operation of the industrial chain.
Secondly, macroeconomic growth is slowing down, and fiscal and balance of payments pressures are becoming more prominent. The combination of high energy costs, high inflation, and weak domestic demand may lead to a decline of 0.5 to 1 percentage point in India's GDP growth rate in fiscal year 2026. On the fiscal front, the government has maintained household gas subsidies unchanged, resulting in a continuous increase in subsidy expenditure. Meanwhile, declining corporate profits have led to a decrease in tax revenue, further increasing fiscal deficit pressures. In terms of balance of payments, the surge in LPG import costs has pushed up the trade deficit, putting pressure on the rupee to depreciate, increasing the risk of capital outflows, and making the external economic environment more complex.
In addition, the job market is also under pressure, and the risk of domestic demand contraction is intensifying. Small and micro enterprises and the service sector serve as the "reservoirs" of India's job market. The industry downturn directly leads to job losses and reduced working hours. In industrial centers such as Noida and Gurgaon, a large number of temporary workers have lost their income due to layoffs, and migrant workers have been forced to return home, resulting in a significant contraction of urban informal employment. At the same time, the rising cost of living has weakened residents' purchasing power, forcing low- and middle-income groups to cut non-essential expenses. Demand in industries such as catering and retail has further weakened, forming a vicious cycle of "rising costs - business contraction - employment reduction - domestic demand decline".
In summary, the significant increase in liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) prices in India is essentially a microcosm of the predicament faced by energy import-dependent economies under the impact of geopolitical conflicts. In the long run, if India cannot break its dependence on energy imports and optimize its energy structure, similar cost shocks will continue to plague its economy, and its path to economic recovery remains fraught with uncertainty.
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