Times of Eswatini

Medical aid rates cause SA’s consumer inflation to soar

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J– Inflation in South Africa has been at an all-time high, thanks to a jump in medical aid rates, according to the latest data from Nedbank.

The bank said this week that inflation is the highest it’s been in four months.

“Higher services inflation was the main driver of higher consumer inflation, which rose to 5.6 per cent year-on-year (YoY) in February, its highest level since October 2023 and above our forecast and the market consensus of 5.3 and 5.4 per cent, respective­ly,” it noted.

Nedbank said that ‘miscellane­ous goods and services’ was also a key contributo­r for the month, adding 0.7 percentage points (pp) and 1.2 pp to the month-on-month (MoM) and YoY headline figures, respective­ly.

Medical aid rates surveyed in February, rose by 9.5 per cent compared with a 6.4 per cent increase in February 2023.

Nedbank said that the prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages were not changed for the month, helping to moderate food inflation to 6.1 per cent. This was its lowest level since April 2022.

Pressures

“The food subcategor­ies showed a broad-based easing in price pressures, except for ‘sugar, sweets, etc’, which still rose by 18.5 per cent,” the bank noted.

Processed food inflation eased somewhat to 5.5 from 6.2 per cent, and this was the main contributo­r to the lower food Consumer Price Index (CPI), while that of ‘unprocesse­d foods’ also contribute­d to the downside, declining to 6.4 from 7.9 per cent.

With the effects of the avian flu dissipatin­g, meat inflation fell further to 1.5 per cent.

Nedbank, however, noted that the prices of vegetables increased at a slower, but still high rate of 9.4 from 12.6 per cent.

The bank argued that inflation will have a downward trend in the coming months, but it admitted that the decline will be slower than what they had previously anticipate­d.

Unchanged

The bank expects the Reserve Bank to leave interest rates unchanged at next week’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting.

“The committee will likely hold, as inflation’s descent towards the 4.5 per cent target stalled over the past two months.

“The Governor has repeatedly stressed that the MPC wants to see headline inflation trending towards the 4.5 per cent midpoint of the target range in a compelling and consistent manner before considerin­g rate cuts. Clearly, headline inflation is not there yet,” Nedbank said.

 ?? Pic) ?? Medical aid rates, surveyed in February, rose by 9.5 per cent compared with a 6.4 per cent increase in February 2023.(Courtesy
Pic) Medical aid rates, surveyed in February, rose by 9.5 per cent compared with a 6.4 per cent increase in February 2023.(Courtesy

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