Business World

Inflation likely eased further in March

-

INFLATION likely eased further in March as the plunge in oil prices was seen to offset a slight uptick in food prices due to a spike in demand caused by the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in Luzon.

A BusinessWo­rld poll of 11 economists held this week yielded a 2.3% median estimate for March headline inflation, closer to the lower end of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) 2-2.8% estimate given on Tuesday.

If realized, March will mark the second consecutiv­e month of easing inflation coming from the 2.6% seen in February, and will also be markedly slower than the 3.3% logged in March 2019.

The central bank has a 2-4% inflation target for 2020 and 2021. It lowered last month its inflation average forecast for this year to 2.2% from 3% mainly due to the lower price trend in recent months, a sharp decrease in oil prices, as well as the economic impact of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) across the world.

The Philippine Statistics Authority will report March inflation data on Tuesday (April 7).

Analysts said the dramatic plunge in oil prices last month likely affected inflation.

“My forecast is 2.4% since the huge fall in fuel prices will more than offset the slight increase in food prices (which may rise due to logistics problems due to COVID -19),” Victor A. Abola, economist at the University of Asia and the Pacific, said.

Oil prices started to free-fall in March as Saudi Arabia brought its selling price down and tried to engage in a price battle with Russia, while demand continued to drop as the COVID-19 outbreak worsened. Late last month, US

President Donald J. Trump and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin agreed to discuss stabilizin­g energy markets.

Mitzie Irene P. Conchada, an economist from De La Salle University, also sees declining oil prices amid lower demand due to production cuts in manufactur­ing and a halt in the services sector.

“The enhanced community quarantine in the country and in most parts of the world will continue to affect production,” Ms. Conchada said in an e-mail.

The month-long Luzon lockdown, scheduled to end on April 12, is meant to prevent the further spread of the virus. The government ordered the temporary shutdown of public transporta­tion, schools and most businesses, except those related to basic goods and services, including groceries, pharmacies, hospitals and banks, among others.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines