Thursday 9 February 2023

Egypt’s Headline Inflation Surges to 25.8% In January amid Imports Delay

Egypt’s Headline Inflation Surges to 25.8% In January amid Imports Delay

Business

Asharq Al-Awsat
Two Egyptian women shopping in a supermarket in Cairo, Egypt, December 1, 2019. REUTERS/Shokry Hussien/Files

Egypt's annual urban consumer price inflation jumped to a higher-than-expected 25.8% in January, data from statistics agency CAPMAS showed on Thursday. The rise from 21.3% in December followed a series of currency devaluations starting in March 2022, a prolonged shortage of foreign currency, and continuing delays in getting imports into the country. The Egyptian pound has fallen by nearly 50% since March. January inflation was the highest since December 2017, a year after a steep devaluation. Economists had expected a reading of 23.75%, according to the median forecast in a Reuters poll of 14. Five analysts had forecast that core inflation would climb to 26.6% from 24.4% in December. Core inflation jumped to 31.241% in January from 24.449% in December. Headline inflation increased across the board, but was driven especially by higher prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages, which make up 32.7% of the index's basket, "as producers continued to pass through higher import bills to shoppers", said Allen Sandeep of Naeem Brokerage. Month-on-month, prices rose by 4.7% compared to 2.1% in December, driven by a 10.1% monthly surge in food and beverage prices, Sandeep said. The high January number increases pressure on the central bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to raise interest rates when it next meets on March 30. At its last meeting on Feb. 2, the MPC kept its lending rate at 17.25% and the deposit rate at 16.25%, saying its hikes of 800 basis points over the last year should help to tame inflation.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/4149461/egypt%E2%80%99s-headline-inflation-surges-258-january-amid-imports-delay

No comments:

Post a Comment