Skies
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2009
- Messages
- 4,094
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
Bangladesh inflation accelerates on food prices
Reuters - 38 minutes ago
DHAKA, Nov 11 - Bangladesh's consumer price inflation picked up to 7.61 percent in September from 7.52 percent the previous month, the government said on Thursday, driven by rising food prices.
Inflation in the 2009/10 fiscal year that ended in June hit 7.31 percent on the back of soaring food costs, above the government's target of 6.5 percent.
Food prices rose 9.72 percent from September 2009, compared with 9.64 percent year on year in August, the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics said.
Non-food inflation eased to 3.69 percent in September from 3.76 percent in August.
Inflation accelerated due to a spike in prices of rice, pulses, fish, meet and spices, a senior bureau official said.
Recent global commodity price increases raise the risk that domestic food prices will spike further in the coming months, the World Bank said in its latest report on the Bangladesh economy.
"Prices in Bangladesh are affected by price developments in the international market, especially food prices in India. India has been experiencing double-digit food inflation since June 2009, and that contributed to food inflation in Bangladesh."
Rice and wheat prices soared 50 percent over the past year, forcing the government to resume sales of rice from stocks at a subsidised rate and to expand social safety net programmes.
Rising food prices are a major concern for the government as nearly 38 percent of the country's more than 150 million people live on less than $1 a day and spend 70 percent of their income on food.
A senior central bank official said inflation was not very worrying yet and he hoped it would come down to 6.5 percent in the second half of the current fiscal year.
"The rise is in line with expectation. We are taking all necessary steps to tame inflationary pressures," he added.
On Aug. 19, the central bank raised both the repo and reverse repo rate by 1 percentage point to 5.5 percent and 3.5 percent, respectively.
The rates were cut by 2 percentage points in late 2009 to shield the economy from the fallout of the global financial crisis.
The rate hikes followed an increase in bank reserve requirements in May.
Reuters - 38 minutes ago
DHAKA, Nov 11 - Bangladesh's consumer price inflation picked up to 7.61 percent in September from 7.52 percent the previous month, the government said on Thursday, driven by rising food prices.
Inflation in the 2009/10 fiscal year that ended in June hit 7.31 percent on the back of soaring food costs, above the government's target of 6.5 percent.
Food prices rose 9.72 percent from September 2009, compared with 9.64 percent year on year in August, the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics said.
Non-food inflation eased to 3.69 percent in September from 3.76 percent in August.
Inflation accelerated due to a spike in prices of rice, pulses, fish, meet and spices, a senior bureau official said.
Recent global commodity price increases raise the risk that domestic food prices will spike further in the coming months, the World Bank said in its latest report on the Bangladesh economy.
"Prices in Bangladesh are affected by price developments in the international market, especially food prices in India. India has been experiencing double-digit food inflation since June 2009, and that contributed to food inflation in Bangladesh."
Rice and wheat prices soared 50 percent over the past year, forcing the government to resume sales of rice from stocks at a subsidised rate and to expand social safety net programmes.
Rising food prices are a major concern for the government as nearly 38 percent of the country's more than 150 million people live on less than $1 a day and spend 70 percent of their income on food.
A senior central bank official said inflation was not very worrying yet and he hoped it would come down to 6.5 percent in the second half of the current fiscal year.
"The rise is in line with expectation. We are taking all necessary steps to tame inflationary pressures," he added.
On Aug. 19, the central bank raised both the repo and reverse repo rate by 1 percentage point to 5.5 percent and 3.5 percent, respectively.
The rates were cut by 2 percentage points in late 2009 to shield the economy from the fallout of the global financial crisis.
The rate hikes followed an increase in bank reserve requirements in May.