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By Citizen Reporter

Journalist


Annual consumer price inflation highest in 13 years

What are the implications of the inflation rate for 2022 being above the inflation target band of the Reserve Bank?


Annual average consumer price inflation increased to 6.9% for 2022, the highest in 13 years, while consumer price inflation slightly dipped to 7.2% in December 2022 from 7.4% in November 2022.

The previous highest inflation rate was 7.9% in 2009 during the financial crisis that hit the global economy. The inflation rate for 2021 was 4.5%.

This is bad news for people who have debt, because 5.9% is significantly higher than the target band of 3% – 6% to contain inflation that the Reserve Bank (Sarb) uses to determine the repo rate. This means that interest rates will increase further and indebted consumers will pay more for their debt.

ALSO READ: October inflation surprises with another increase

According to Statistics SA, food and non-alcoholic beverages increased by 12.4% year-on-year and contributed 2.1 percentage points, while housing and utilities increased by 4.1% and contributed 1 percentage point, transport increased by 13.9% and contributed 2 percentage points and miscellaneous goods and services increased by 4.9% and contributed 0.7 of a percentage point.

In December, the annual inflation rate for goods was 10.1%, down from 10.4% in November and 4.3%, down from 4.5% in November for services.

ALSO READ: Inflation down while CPI up in September 2022

The average annual consumer price inflation was 6.9% in 2022 (i.e. the average CPI for all urban areas for 2022 compared with that for 2021).

This was 2.4 percentage points higher than the corresponding average of 4.5% in 2021.  

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