Skip to main content

Consumer inflation slows again, after two months of increases

| Economic factors

But with rating downgrades hanging over SA, the Reserve Bank is unlikely to cut rates on Thursday despite the benign inflation environment

Consumer inflation dipped as expected in October, thanks in part to smaller fuel price increases and a continued moderation of food inflation.

The consumer price index (CPI) rose 4.8% in October from a year earlier, after an unrevised 5.1% increase in September.

The Reserve Bank’s monetary policy committee announces its decision on interest rates on Thursday, when it will detail its outlook for inflation over the medium term.

The Bank surprised by not cutting rates at its last meeting in September, and with credit rating downgrades to junk looming for SA — possibly as soon as Friday, when Moody’s and S&P are both expected to announce the results of their reviews — a cut on Thursday is unlikely, even in a benign inflation environment.

CPI inflation has been within the Bank’s 3%-6% target band since April, thanks in large part to tamer food inflation, which has come down steadily since returning to single digits in February, as a severe drought eased in most parts of the country.

The October fuel price increase was also smaller than September’s, Investec economist Kamilla Kaplan noted, at 4c a litre for petrol and 23c a litre for diesel in October — against 29c and 41c respectively in September.

Compared with a month earlier, consumer inflation rose 0.3% in October, slower than the 0.5% month-on-month increase reported in September.

The CPI for goods rose 4.1% in October from a year earlier, and the CPI for services was up 5.5% on the year.

Pin It

Related Articles

By: Tawanda Karombo – IOL Business In a year marked by stiff economic challenges, Shoprite has announced significant increases in the remuneration of its top executives, while simultaneously warning about the growing price sensitivity among South...
By: Manyane Manyane - IOL Retailers have been criticised for keeping essential food items prices high despite production costs continuing to decline.
The Department of Mineral and Petroleum Resources is in talks with National Treasury to lower the cost of fuel, with a move to change to both petrol and diesel prices in South Africa.
By: Nick Wilson – Fin24 Releasing its latest Essential Food Price Monitoring Report (EFPM) on Friday, the Competition Commission said the "slow transmission" of reduced cooking oil prices to consumers, for instance, raised concerns about retailer...
By: Siphelele Dludla – IOL Business Report Sentiment in the retail industry in South Africa has ticked up though it remains in contractionary territory as consumers have begun feeling confident that the cost of living is slightly easing.