Kenya has reviewed the goods used to measure inflation, dropping
archaic goods like
radio and video cassettes and including contemporary items like pay TV subscription, mobile money transfer fees and garbage collection charges.
radio and video cassettes and including contemporary items like pay TV subscription, mobile money transfer fees and garbage collection charges.
The Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics (KNBS) says the new basket will be used from Tuesday when it
releases the March inflation figures. The bureau is also starting the
publication of a quarterly jobs report, which will be used to indicate
the rate of job creation in the economy, job losses, and
underemployment, among others.
Job reports are one of
the most important indicators of the health of an economy. KNBS will
release the four quarterly reports from 2019 together.
“Mobile
phone airtime has the highest expenditure in the new CPI with an
overall weight of 5.496 percent having changed from 3.086 percent,” KNBS
director-general Zachary Mwangi said in a statement on Monday.
It is highest when excluding food component that will have a weighting of 32.9 percent.
The number of items in the inflation basket has been increased
from 234 to 330, while the data collection zones across the country have
been doubled from 25 to 50. Kenyans’ expenditure patterns are a
reflection of the increase in urbanisation and expansion of the middle
class. The newly introduced items that now make up the 10 most important
ones in the household budget.
City bus matatu fare is
the second most important after mobile airtime, followed by rent cost
for a single room. Hotel and restaurant food is the fourth most
important item, climbing from ninth position in the previous CPI, with
beef, beer, bread and fresh milk also featuring prominently.
Kerosene,
associated with low-income households, has been removed from the top 10
expenditures list which indicates that even rural Kenyans are now
accessing alternative sources of energy.
In an economy,
inflation figures are important in estimating the cost of living to
adjust to earnings and pension of residents in a country.
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