Why Noida unrest is not about labour disputes
When everything costs more and wages do not keep pace, households cut nutrition, defer medical care, and pull children from private schools
THE Reserve Bank of India (RBI)'s bi-monthly Inflation Expectations Survey of households in March 2026 shows perceived inflation to be 7.2 per cent. This is more than double the official Consumer Price Index (CPI) based reading of 3.2 per cent for February. The CPI was revamped recently to be more representative of true inflation. The RBI survey also shows households expect prices to rise 8.5 per cent over the next three months and 8.8 per cent over the year. This is not a statistical quirk or popular pessimism. It is lived experience. And the gap between official data and ground-level perception of reality has rarely been more politically charged.







