Money Markets
By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Inflation has increased for two months in a row since February when it bucked a five-month declining trend, inching up marginally on rising prices of key food items.
- Inflation had been dropping since last August when it hit a 25–month high of 8.36 per cent but was cooled by the falling electricity and fuel prices.
Inflation last month rose way above government target
for the year, pushed by rising prices of key food items such as
tomatoes and potatoes.
Data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS)
show that it rose to 6.31 per cent in March from 5.61 per cent the
previous month.
“The rise in prices was mainly as a result of the
dry weather conditions experienced during the period,” KNBS said in a
statement.
At 6.31 per cent, last month’s inflation is well above the Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK) target of five per cent.
Inflation has increased for two months in a row
since February when it bucked a five-month declining trend, inching up
marginally on rising prices of key food items.
A kilogramme of tomatoes last month went up by Sh11
to Sh99 compared to similar month last year while a kilo of potatoes
rose by a shilling to Sh53.
The KNBS data, however, show that the price of milk, sugar and maize flour dropped in the period.
The KNBS data, however, show that the price of milk, sugar and maize flour dropped in the period.
The increase in the cost of living comes at a time
households have enjoyed the benefits of cheaper geothermal electricity
after the injection of the 280 megawatts of steam energy last December.
Energy officials this month said they will not
raise electricity costs, a key component in the country’s inflation
basket, despite a prolonged dry spell that has affected water levels in
hydropower dams.
The energy regulator mid-last month raised
petroleum prices for the first time in six months, citing rebounding of
crude oil prices but impact on inflation has been minimal.
Inflation had been dropping since last August when
it hit a 25–month high of 8.36 per cent but was cooled by the falling
electricity and fuel prices.
A rise in inflation rate means households are forced to shoulder higher commodity prices.
A rise in inflation rate means households are forced to shoulder higher commodity prices.
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