Annual rate of inflation hikes by 29.6%, monthly by 4.3%: CAPMAS

Hisham Salah
4 Min Read

The annual rate of inflation hiked to 29.6% in January compared to January 2016. The rate had previously stood at an annual inflation rate of 24.3% during December 2016, according to the monthly report issued by the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS).

The monthly rate recorded an increase of 4.3%, which was driven by an increase in prices of meat and poultry by 6.4%, grain and bread by 9%, and milk, cheese, and eggs by 11.5%.

CAPMAS added that the monthly rate of inflation was also driven by an increase in vegetables prices by 3.5%, fish and seafood by 7.1%, fat and oils by 11.9%, fruits by 4%, and coffee, tea, and cocoa by 13.3%.

The statement issued on Saturday attributed the increase of the inflation rate to price hikes in the food and beverages sector, as they registered an increase of 38.6%, representing a 19.85% increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

It pointed out that the prices of meat and poultry increased by 30.2%, representing an increase of 4.27% in CPI. Moreover, fish and seafood hiked by 30.9% in the annual rate, causing a rise in CPI by 0.76%.

The report stated that the prices of milk, cheese, and eggs increased by 30.5%, raising the annual CPI by 1.99%, due to the increase in prices of full cream milk by 36%, cheese by 40%, and eggs by 17.7%.

The report added that the prices of oils and fats increased by 63.1%, leading to a 2.01% rise in the CPI. Meanwhile, fruit prices increased by 28.3% and vegetables by 30%.

Also, the prices of sugar and confectionary increased by 62.9%.

It’s important to note that Beltone Financial issued its annual report covering the Egyptian economy, titled “the Great Recovery,” which gave an overview of its forecasts for growth rates, budget deficit, and performance of economic sectors.

The report based its predictions on the high inflation rates. It noted that the inflation rate will fall to 18% in the coming fiscal year (FY) and then to 11% in 2019.

However, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) expected in its “Country Report” about Egypt that the CPI inflation will record 16.6% by the end of FY 2016/17, 11.1% by the end of 2017/18, 9% by 2018/19, and 7.8% by the end of 2019/20, consolidating at 7% by the end of 2020/21.

Aliaa El-Mahdi, former dean of the Faculty of Economics and Political Science of Cairo University, wrote on her Facebook page that Egypt did not witness such a high rate of inflation during the past 100 years.

She added that, because of the rate, people’s savings lost a lot of its value, while their ability to purchase goods or services has also reduced.

The reasons that caused the hike of inflation are different, such as the Central Bank of Egypt’s (CBE) unlimited money printing, subsidy cuts, and flotation, she noted.

El-Mahdi said that all of these decisions were made without considering any protective solutions that prevent harm from occurring to the poorer segments of society.

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