Food prices hit 14-year high as loadshedding escalates

17 Feb, 2023 - 00:02 0 Views
Food prices hit 14-year high  as loadshedding escalates

eBusiness Weekly

South African food prices increased at the fastest pace in almost 14 years in January, when the state power company intensified rolling blackouts.

Annual food and non-alcoholic beverage inflation quickened to 13,4 percent from 12,4 percent in December, Pretoria-based Statistics South Africa said Wednesday in a statement on its website. That’s the highest rate since April 2009, it said.

The increase in food prices came as state-owned Eskom imposed power cuts of as long as 12 hours a day — the most severe outages yet — for nine days in January. Power cuts, known locally as load shedding, have been implemented for 108 straight days because of frequent breakdowns at Eskom’s plants.

The South African Reserve Bank last month raised its 2023 forecast for food-price inflation to 7,3 percent from 6,2 percent, with governor Lesetja Kganyago warning that it could continue to surprise on the upside. Poultry, egg and agriculture-industry bodies have said the power cuts are adding to the costs of food production.

The headline consumer-price index rose 6,9 percent from a year earlier, compared with 7,2 percent in December.

Rising food prices mean it could take longer for inflation to approach 4,5 percent —  the midpoint of the target range at which the monetary policy committee prefers to anchor expectations – and force the central bank to keep interest rates higher for
longer.

Average inflation expectations for the year stand at 6,1 percent, the Bureau for Economic Research said in January.

Kganyago in January stressed the central bank “means business about price stability” and was reluctant to commit to pivoting away from policy tightening.

That’s even as the central bank moved closer to ending its interest-rate hiking cycle on January 26, when it lifted borrowing costs by 25 basis points to 7,25 percent — the smallest increase in five meetings.

Forward-rate agreements, used to
speculate on borrowing costs, show traders are pricing one more 25 basis-point increase in the current rate-hiking cycle. — Bloomberg

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