The
National Bureau of Statistics on Monday announced that the Consumer Price
Index, which measures inflation rate, rose to a 94-month high of 18.3 per cent
in October.
The
18.3 per cent inflation rate, which is about 0.48 per cent higher than the 17.9
per cent recorded in September, is the highest since January 2009 when the NBS
started publishing the revised version of the CPI.
The
increase in inflation is not unconnected to pressures recorded in some
sub-indexes such as housing, electricity, gas, water, lubricants for personal
transport and education.
The
report read in part, “The CPI, which measures inflation, increased by 18.3 per
cent (year-on-year) in October 2016, 0.48 per cent points higher from the rate
recorded in September.
“Increases
were recorded across almost all major divisions, which contribute to the
headline index. Communication and restaurants and hotels recorded the slowest
pace of growth in October, growing at 5.7 per cent and 9.4 per cent
year-on-year, respectively.
“The
food index rose by 17.1 per cent (year-on-year) in October, up by 0.47 per cent
points from 16.6 per cent recorded in September. During the month, the highest
increases were seen in housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels, as
well as fuels and lubricants for personal transport equipment and education.”
The
report added that the least growth pace recorded in October was experienced in
communication (5.7 per cent), restaurants and hotels (9.4 per cent), and
recreation and culture (10.3 per cent).
The
NBS noted that the urban index rose by 19.9 per cent (year-on-year) in October
from 19.5 per cent recorded in September, while the rural index increased by
16.95 per cent in October from 16.4 per cent in the previous month.
No comments:
Post a Comment