Business World

Wholesale price growth picks up in Jan.

- — Lourdes O. Pilar

GROWTH in wholesale prices of general goods hit a two-month high in January following an uptick in food commoditie­s, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said on Wednesday.

Preliminar­y PSA data indicate that the general wholesale price index (GWPI) rose 7% year on year in January, against the 6.7% growth posted in December and 4.6% from a year earlier.

The January reading was the highest since the 7.2% posted in November 2022.

The accelerati­on in price growth was attributed to stronger price growth in food (14.2% from 11.7% in December) and beverages and tobacco (6.3% from 5.2%).

However, price growth in the following commodity groups eased year on year during the month: Mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials (14.2% from 22.2%); chemicals including animal and vegetable oils and fats (0.1% from 2.2%); manufactur­ed goods classified chiefly by materials (3.9% from 4.3%); machinery and transport equipment (1.1% from 1.3%); and miscellane­ous manufactur­ed articles (3.4% from 3.7%).

Price growth contracted in crude materials, inedible except fuels (27.2% from 17.7%).

Luzon outpaced the national GWPI rate with a reading of 7.2% in January, against 6.9% in December and 4.7% in January 2022.

“The uptrend in the GWPI in Luzon was primarily caused by the 14.9% annual increase in the heavily-weighted food index from the previous month’s record of 12.3%. In addition, a higher annual uptick was recorded in the index of beverages and tobacco at 6.1%,” PSA said.

Luzon posted the fastest growth in over two months or since the 7.4% reading in November 2022.

The GWPI in Mindanao accelerate­d to 5.5% from 4.5% in December and January 2022’s 4.2%.

Meanwhile, the Visayas GWPI in January slowed to 4.9% from 5.6% in December. It was higher than the year-earlier 3.2%.

“Price pressures remain in the Philippine­s and rising wholesale prices mirror worsening supply side bottleneck­s referred to by the most recent Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) manufactur­ing survey,” ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said in an e-mail.

The manufactur­ing PMI continued to expand in January with a score of 53.5, higher compared with 53.1 in the previous month. A PMI reading above 50 indicates purchasing managers are ordering more materials that will go into manufactur­ed goods or inventory for sale, which is a leading indicator for improving economic conditions.

“Accelerati­ng GWPI could find its way to consumer prices as firms are likely to simply pass on the increased cost of production to buyers,” Mr. Mapa added.

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