Business World

Feb. inflation scrapes top of 2018 target

- By Ranier Olson R. Reusora Researcher

THE INCREASE of prices of widely used goods quickened further in February on account largely of the heavily weighted food and non-beverage sector, the government reported yesterday.

Reflecting the new rebased index under 2012 prices, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said that headline inflation picked up to 3.9% last month, up from 3.4% in January and the 3.1% clip a year ago. The inflation reading was fastest in more than three years since September 2014’s 3.9%.

February’s pace brought yearto-date headline inflation to 3.7% against the BSP’s 2- 4% target range for the year.

Using the previous 2006-based prices, inflation stood at 4.5% in February, past the midpoint of the 4-4.8% estimate range given by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)’s Department of Economic Research for the month. February’s actual 2006-based pace was also above the 4.2% median forecast of 14 economists polled by BusinessWo­rld last week.

Meanwhile, core inflation ( based on 2006 prices) — which

excludes volatile food and energy prices — jumped to 4.4% from 3.9% in January.

In last week’s press briefing, BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said that despite the rebasing of the consumer price index, the central bank’s target range of 2-4% for the year still makes sense and does not need to be changed, citing the economy’s current “stage of developmen­t as well as the inflation dynamics.”

The new series puts less weight on food overall in 2012 than in 2006, but assign bigger weights to rice and other cereals, ING Bank senior economist Jose Mario I. Cuyegkeng noted.

“Non-alcoholic beverages weight in 2012 [is] marginally higher. Nonfood commoditie­s weight [is] higher due to higher weights for transport, health, education (tertiary), communicat­ion and restaurant­s. Dominated lower weights for housing and utilities, clothing, furnishing­s and recreation,” he said.

PSA said the accelerati­on in February ( based on 2012 prices) was led by the faster 4.8% annual gain in the heavily weighted food and non-alcoholic beverages index, compared to January’s 4.4% and February 2017’s three percent.

The 16.9% double- digit annual increase in alcoholic beverages and tobacco also contribute­d to the spike in overall price increases in February, faster than January’s 12.2% increase and more than double February 2017’s 7.2%.

Higher annual price hikes were also noted in the indices of transport ( 5.8% from the previous month’s 4.5%); furnishing, household equipment and routine maintenanc­e of the house (2.5% from 2.2%); restaurant and miscellane­ous goods and services (2.5% from 2.2%); as well as clothing and footwear (2% from 1.9%).

Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at the Land Bank of the Philippine­s, attributed February’s inflation spike “primarily” to Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) law that cut personal income tax rates but reduced exemptions from the value added tax and added levies on cars, fuel, sugar-sweetened drinks, investment products and a host of other items when it took effect in January.

“Apart from the TRAIN law, other factors such as weather disturbanc­es and the depreciati­on of the peso also pushed inflation higher by boosting the costs of some agricultur­al products and increasing the local currency value of imported goods,” he said.

Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at Union Bank of the Philippine­s, also attributed the increase to the TRAIN law but also cited higher utility rates (with an 8.6% increase month-on-month), a weaker peso (a 2.5% decline from January) and rice supply shocks.

The overall electricit­y rate increased to P9.47 per kilowatt-hour (/ kWh) in February from P8.72/kWh in January. The Manila Electric Co., the country’s largest electricit­y distributo­r, implemente­d a P1.08/kWh rate hike in two tranches — the first consisting of 0.75/ kWh increase in February and the P0.33/kWh balance this month.

The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said in a statement that “[m]easures to curb inflation and cushion its impact on the poor are urgently needed” with February inflation scraping the top of the government’s full-year target.

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