Spikes in foodstuff prices and commuter fares have reversed
gains from recent tax cuts and falling oil prices, pushing up the April
inflation rate to 5.62 percent. This represents a marginal increase from
the revised March inflation figure of 5.51 percent.
Data
compiled by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) show that
Kenyans are paying more for consumer goods despite the reduction of the
value-added tax (VAT) rate from 16 to 14 percent effective April 1.
The
data shows that food that accounts for 32.9 percent of the basket used
by KNBS to determine inflation rose by between 17 and 24 percent in the
period under review.
The VAT cuts do not apply to unprocessed foods, which most Kenyans consume.
One
kilogramme of maize flour sold at Sh53.73 last month, an increase of 17
percent from April last year while a kilogramme of onions sold at
Sh118.20, a rise of 24 percent from a similar period last year.
Residents in Nairobi and satellite towns paid more for transport
after bus fares rose to an average of Sh50 from Sh30 in April last year
reflecting the highest rise at 66.67 percent, despite the cost fall in
fuel prices due to depressed demand in the wake of coronavirus.
The
Treasury last month cut VAT rate by two percent to lower the cost of
basic commodities and cushion Kenyans from the economic meltdown
occasioned by coronavirus outbreak but this did not ease the cost of
living after KNBS reviewed goods used to measure inflation.
“The
increase was mainly attributed to the increase in prices of some food
items like loose maize grain, Sukuma Wiki, onions, Irish potatoes and
carrots,” said the KNBS Thursday.
The State agency in
March reviewed the goods used to measure the cost of living a move that
saw the inflation rate for the month fall to 5.51 percent down from 6.06
percent.
In February, the inflation rate stood at 6.80 percent.
The
State agency dropped archaic goods like radio and video cassettes and
included contemporary items like pay-TV subscription, mobile money
transfer fees and garbage collection charges under the new measures.
In
March, petrol prices dropped by the biggest margin since 2010 after
crude oil prices crashed to an 18-year low on the coronavirus pandemic
in what was expected to ease the cost of transport.
The
price of super petrol fell to Sh92.87 per litre from Sh110.87,
representing a Sh18 drop while diesel dropped Sh4.09 to Sh97.56 but this
did not ease bus fares for city residents.
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