Expensive food and fuel lifted Inflation
to a four year high last month as the cost of living measure rose above
the government’s target for the first time since January last year.
Inflation jumped to 9.04 per
cent in February from 6.99 per cent a month earlier, data from the Kenya
National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) shows.
“Over the
review period, food and non-alcoholic drinks’ index increased by 3.28
per cent. This was mainly attributed to increases in prices of sukuma
wiki, maize flour, milk, cabbages, spinach, potatoes and maize grain
among others,” the bureau said, citing the prevailing drought
conditions.
“The transport index increased by 0.74 per
cent in February compared to January, mainly on account of increases in
the pump prices of petrol and diesel.”
Diesel hit a 26-month high mid-February after the energy regulator adjusted the prices to match rising global oil prices.
Diesel is retailing at Sh90.2 from Sh68.9 a year ago while kerosene went up 67.9 per cent to Sh68.20.
Food,
energy and transport costs have a significant weighting in the basket
of goods and services used to measure inflation, making them main driver
of the cost of living measure
The food crisis is underlined by inflation moving
outside the government preferred range of 2.5-7.5 per cent in the medium
term.
The rally in food prices saw annual food inflation hit a high of 16.50 per cent.
Kenya
declared drought a national disaster on February 10, calling for aid to
counter drought that is posing a major risk to people, livestock and
wildlife.
The Kenya Red Cross has estimated around 2.7
million people are in need of food aid after low rainfall in October and
November and the next rainy season not due before April.
The
food crisis has prompted a review of the national budget with the
Treasury cutting further project spending to free Sh6.9 billion for
drought mitigation.
The KNBS data shows that a
two-kilogramme packet of the staple maize flour was up Sh7 to an average
of Sh126 in the month to February, and up from Sh105 same month last
year.
A kilo of sukuma wiki rose to Sh54 from Sh36.8
over the past year while a similar quantity of cabbages rose by Sh26 to
Sh74.8 over the period.
The rise in food prices has wrecked household budgets.
The rise in food prices has wrecked household budgets.
Consumers
also had to contend with rising power bills in February following an
increase in the forex levy to a 15-month high in February as a result of
the weakening of the Kenya shilling against the US dollar.
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