Inflation in India eased to its lowest level since 2009 in April, data showed Tuesday, fanning hopes that the central bank would cut interest rates further to help spur a sharply slowing economy. The Wholesale Price Index, India's most closely-watched cost-of-living benchmark, rose 4.89 percent in April from a year earlier, sharply lower than the previous month's rise of 5.96 percent. The drop of more than one percentage point between the March and April level beat consensus market expectations that inflation would decline to around 5.5 percent. It follows data on Monday that showed consumer price inflation slipped below the psychologically important 10 percent level to 9.39 percent in April. The figures come as a boost to the Congress-led government which is keen to tame inflation before general elections due in the first half of 2014, as it looks to boost a slowed economy and shake off a spate of corruption scandals. The fall in inflation to its lowest level since November 2009 raised hopes that upward price pressures may ease in Asia's third-largest economy. But the central bank has warned that India's massive current account shortfall -- the broadest measure of trade -- must also improve for it to significantly reduce borrowing costs. Even with the fall in inflation, "the central bank is probably going to need to see several months of better trade data before opting to cut rates again," Credit Suisse economist Robert Prior-Wandesforde said ahead of Tuesday's data. The central bank has already made three 25 basis point cuts to lending rates since the start of 2013 to jumpstart an economy growing at five percent, its lowest level in a decade.