Raging onion prices, however, remains a key concern
After tomato, it is the time of onion now to go red as its prices have been skyrocketing in last few weeks. With decline in tomato, potato, chicken and cooking gas prices, estimated average cost of both vegetarian and a non-vegetarian thalis have slipped in October. However, swelling onion and pulses prices capped the fall in overall thali prices in the month.
The average cost of a vegetarian thali was Rs27.5 in October, which is around 1.4 percent lower than Rs27.9 in previous month, based on an analysis by Crisil. Compared to October last year, vegetarian thali got cheaper by Rs1.50 or 5.2 percent.
Similarly, average cost of a non-vegetarian thali where dal (pulses) is replaced by chicken (broiler) also cooled off in October falling by Rs2.1 or 3.4 percent from previous month to Rs58.4. In the same month last year, average cost of a non-vegetarian thali was Rs62.7. So, non-vegetarian thali cost 7 percent cheaper in October in a year.
The average cost of preparing a thali at home is calculated based on input prices prevailing in north, south, east, and west India. Monthly change reflects the impact on the common man’s expenditure. The data also reveals the ingredients (cereals, pulses, broilers, vegetables, spices, edible oil, cooking gas) driving changes in the cost of a thali.
A sharp decline in potato and tomato prices by 21 percent and 38 percent respectively year-on-year in October drove both the thali costs lower. However, non-veg thali price declined faster as the price of chicken is estimated to have softened 5-7 percent year-on-year over a high base. Chicken or broiler prices contribute 50 percent to a non-veg thali cost.