Inflation has hit a five-year high of 11.70 per cent, driven by
higher food and fuel prices that have been on the rise since last year.
This has pushed the cost of living measure further outside the government’s preferred ceiling of 7.5 per cent.
Official
data shows inflation has increased from 11.48 per cent in April, making
it the highest rate since May 2012, according to the Kenya National
Bureau of Statistics (KNBS).
“Between April and May
2017, food and non-alcoholic drinks’ index increased by 1.26 per cent.
The food index increased due to rise in prices of sugar, milk, maize
grain and other food items,” the bureau said in a statement Wednesday.
“As a result, the year-on-year food inflation rose by 21.52 per cent in May 2017.”
The KNBS also partly attributed the inflation to increases in the cost of kerosene, cooking gas and charcoal.
Food
takes up the largest share (36 per cent) of the basket of goods that is
used to calculate inflation, followed by utilities such as rent, water,
electricity, gas and fuels at 18 per cent.
The cost of
flour at posho mills and consumed by the masses, rose the most at 54.3
per cent over the past year to Sh64.33 a kilogramme.
They
have not benefited from a government subsidy of Sh6 billion. It cut the
price 90 kg bag of maize to Sh2,300 from above Sh4,000, allowing the
2kg packet of sifted flour to be sold for Sh90 against the market cost
of Sh140.
Sugar prices rallied to Sh168.18 a kilo in
May from Sh112.60 a year ago and Sh136.45 in April. Half-litre fresh
milk pouch increased by Sh12 over the past year to Sh65 per packet in
May, but is expected to come down by Sh10 on Thursday.
The
drought left about 2.7 million people in need of food aid, posing a
political headache for President Uhuru Kenyatta as he seeks a second
term.
Policymakers held the benchmark lending rate at 10 per cent this week, saying its policy stance had reduced the threat of demand-driven inflation. Kerosene, used by the poor, rose 38.2 per cent to Sh66.26 while diesel was up 24.8 per cent to Sh89.70.
Policymakers held the benchmark lending rate at 10 per cent this week, saying its policy stance had reduced the threat of demand-driven inflation. Kerosene, used by the poor, rose 38.2 per cent to Sh66.26 while diesel was up 24.8 per cent to Sh89.70.
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