Price cuts rarely reach you as fast as policy changes are announced. When governments reduce taxes, you expect cheaper groceries almost instantly. But those changes often stay invisible on supermarket shelves for weeks, sometimes even months.
As consumer voices grow louder, the gap between policy and practice is hard to ignore. Nalini Unagar recently pointed out that everyday essentials like namkeen, shampoo, butter, ghee, cheese, bottled water, and sweets are still sold at old prices despite GST relaxations.
Her observation reflects what many buyers across cities have experienced. Sellers often claim that existing stock or unchanged input costs prevent them from passing on benefits, leaving customers frustrated when tax cuts fail to show up as savings.
Interestingly, only big-ticket items like motorcycles, air conditioners, and insurance policies have seen noticeable discounts. These changes look more like reactions to public pressure than actual systemic reforms, hinting that the relief might not last long.
It shows how market psychology now influences pricing more than tax policy itself. Inflation fears, quick reactions, and shallow corrections continue to dominate while real, visible relief for everyday consumers remains as distant as ever.







