The cost of living in Kenya rose to an eight-month high in
April, nearly breaching the government’s upper limit of 7.5 per cent due
to a significant rise in the cost of food.
Inflation,
which measures the cost of living, rose to a high of 7.08 per cent in
April up from 6.31 per cent last in March, the Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics (KNBS) indicated.
KNBS indicated that
between March and April, there were significant price increases in
respect of several food items such as maize flour, potatoes, tomatoes,
milk, cabbages, beans and onions, which pushed up the food and
non-alcoholic rrinks’ index by 3.92 per cent.
“The
observed food price increases were mainly attributed to the dry weather
conditions experienced in the first quarter of the year,” KNBS
director-general, Zachary Mwangi, noted.
In the same period, housing, water, electricity and other fuels’ index increased by 0.23 per cent.
“Although
there was a slight fall in the cost of electricity and cooking gas, in
aggregate, these and other observed price decreases were slightly
outweighed by increased costs of house rents, kerosene, charcoal and
other utilities,” KNBS said.
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