A trading at a food market. A sharp rise in food prices last year
affected the poor most, according to the 2016 Economic Survey. PHOTO |
FILE
By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
A sharp increase in food prices last year hit
Kenya’s urban poor hardest even as falling fuel and electricity prices
cut the cost of living for the rich, according to the newly released
Economic Survey data.
The annual survey, whose findings were released on Tuesday,
shows that food prices rose faster than the cost of other goods to
average 11.4 per cent, adding to the burden on Nairobi’s poor who spend a
third of their income on food.
“Food inflation was the main driver of inflation
for Nairobi’s poor and regions outside the city because food accounts
for a larger share of the households’ incomes,” said James Gatungu, the
director of production statistics at Kenya National Bureau of Statistics
(KNBS).
Average inflation topped 6.9 per cent for the poor
in Nairobi and other towns compared to an average of 2.6 per cent for
the affluent whose spending power stayed nearly at the previous year’s
level.
Life was also much better for Kenya’s middle class
whose cost of living rose 4.3 per cent, underlining the disproportionate
ways in which the economy affected the different income segments.
Kenya was early last year hit by a dry spell that
depressed agricultural output across the board, raising food prices. The
heavy El Nino rains that fell in the last quarter of 2015 also dampened
agricultural output, further piling pressure on food prices.
The differences in inflation outcomes among the
population are linked to the different consumption habits. The cost of
living is also impacted by the different shopping basket mix used to
measure inflation outside Nairobi, which largely comprises basic items
like food.
Nairobi with a higher concentration of wealthy
Kenyans spends a smaller portion of its income on necessities like food,
making it less prone to changes in prices of agricultural commodities.
Wealthy homes are often cushioned against food
inflation because food accounts for a negligible portion of their income
unlike the poor, who spend nearly half their income on food.
The recent decline in petroleum prices has
continued to reduce motoring and transport expenses for the urban rich,
easing the burden on consumers.
Transport takes up the largest share (over a
quarter) of the wealthy homes’ budgets, making them the biggest winners
of lower petrol prices that dived 11.6 per cent last year in line with a
slump in global crude prices.
The low-price party for the rich was further
supported by a steady decline in electricity prices, with the drop in
tariffs for consumers of more than 50 units monthly. Though life remains
expensive in Nairobi, the Economic Survey data shows that the cost of
goods is rising faster in the other counties, weakening the purchasing
power of workers who on average earn less than their counterparts in the
city.
Nairobi’s average cost of living measure stood at
6.1 per cent last year, below the 6.9 per cent for the remaining 46
counties, indicating a faster increase in the cost of goods in the
countryside.
Food inflation stood at 11.4 per cent, towering
above other goods in the basket that is used to track price changes and
to calculate inflation.
Food accounts for the largest share of the basket
at 36 per cent, meaning it was the key driver of headline inflation that
averaged 6.6 per cent last year
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