A woman sells groceries at Nyeri Municipal Market. In March last year,
low-income households had an inflation level of 3.16pc and 2.94pc for
upper income earners. FILE
By GEOFFREY IRUNGU,
In Summary
- Last December low-income households in Nairobi had an inflation level of 7.65 per cent against 5.62 per cent and 5.97 per cent per cent for upper and middle income households, respectively.
- The poor in Nairobi, who mostly live in slums, bear a disproportionate effect from rising prices because most of their income, if not all, is spent on food.
Nairobi’s low income groups have been the worst
hit by inflation in the past nine months, new data from the Kenya
National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) shows.
Last December low-income households in Nairobi had
an inflation level of 7.65 per cent against 5.62 per cent and 5.97 per
cent per cent for upper and middle income households, respectively.
“Both the rich and the poor are affected by
inflation but when prices of basic goods go up, the poor are most
affected because most of them don’t even have jobs. If they had jobs
inflation would be less of a problem,” said Joseph Kieyah, principal
analyst and head of the Private Sector Development Division at the Kenya
Institute of Public Policy and Research (KIPPRA).
In March last year, low-income households had an
inflation level of 3.16 per cent while upper and middle income homes had
a price level of 2.94 and 3.56 per cent respectively, showing a
reversal in fortunes.
The biggest increases in prices occurred when
basic goods such as food were in short supply because the Inflation
Index assigns a weight of 36.04 per cent to food items.
The poor in Nairobi, who mostly live in slums,
bear a disproportionate effect from rising prices because most of their
income, if not all, is spent on food.
A 2007 KNBS study showed that income of the bottom
20 per cent of the population was not enough to buy food, leave alone
other basics.
“Even from casual observation the poor are
suffering the most from high prices. That is why you are seeing
increased crime. We have data showing that the poor pay 10 times more to
access water than the rich,” Consumer Federation of Kenya (Cofek) chief
executive officer Stephen Mutoro said.
KNBS identifies low income Nairobi households as
those that spend less than Sh23,670 a month. The middle-income
households spend between Sh23,671 and Sh119,999 while the upper-income
group spends above Sh121,000 a month.
The new Valued Added Tax (VAT) Act 2013, which
came into effect on September 2 last year, had the most impact on the
rich whose level of inflation level nearly tripled.
The law brought many luxury items that were
previously either exempted or zero-rated under the consumer tax. The
goods affected were mostly consumed by the rich.
The change saw the overall inflation for the
rich-income category jump from 2.38 per cent in August to 6.16 per cent
in September, before moderating to 5.37 and 5.50 per cent in October and
November, respectively.
However, the rich still experienced lower inflation than the rest of the population in overall terms.
Caviar, pure-bred breeding horses, asses, mules
and hinnies, and other types of horses — all a preserve of the rich —
were previously exempt.
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