Increased prices of sugar, petrol, electricity and health put
pressure on households in the month of July, pushing the inflation rate
to a four-month high of 4.35 per cent.
Data released on
Tuesday by Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) showed that the
cost of living measure rose in July by 0.07 percentage points, from 4.28
per cent recorded in June.
The rise in the inflation rate persists even as the Central Bank of Kenya expects it to remain within the government range.
The
cost of accessing health services went up by 1.97 per cent in July,
translating to a 6.17 per cent rise from the same time last year.
The price of a kilogramme of sugar rose by Sh8.56 or 6.66 per cent on average to retail at Sh137.11.
This
period was characterised by heightened crackdown on illegal importation
of the commodity in the country triggering a probe by Parliament.
At the same time, the price of kerosene and petrol went up, putting pressure on inflation.
This was after Treasury CS Henry Rotich imposed an excise duty of Sh10.30 per litre to curb adulteration.
The move send a litre of kerosene to Sh86.69, being 36.4 per cent higher than it was in July last year.
“Housing,
water, electricity and other fuels’ index increased by 0.12 per cent in
July 2018 compared to 0.52 per cent recorded in June 2018. This was
mainly attributed to an increase in kerosene, electricity and cooking
gas,” said KNBS Director General Zachary Mwangi in a statement.
The
cost of a 13 kilogramme cooking gas cylinder rose by 0.23 per cent in
July to retail at an average of Sh2,176.31, being about five per cent
higher than it was at the same period last year.
The price of four kilogrammes of charcoal eased marginally by 0.53 per cent but is 68.34 per cent more expensive year-on-year.
However,
food and non-alcoholics index, which accounts for 36 per cent of the
basket used to calculate inflation, decreased by 2.4 per cent as more
foodstuffs registered decline in prices in line with improved weather
condition.
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