Business Day

Food prices expected to drop

- Asha Speckman Economics Writer speckmana@businessli­ve.co.za

Food prices are expected to drop despite factory prices surpassing inflation forecasts in December. BNP Paribas economist Jeffrey Schultz said headline producer price inflation was expected to ease in the first quarter.

Food prices are expected to drop despite factory prices surpassing inflation expectatio­ns in December 2016.

BNP Paribas economist Jeffrey Schultz said headline producer price inflation was expected to ease in the first quarter of 2017 and drop further in the second half of the year.

Final manufactur­ed goods inflation rose 7.1% in December 2016, fuelled by higher food inflation, beverages and tobacco products, Statistics SA data showed on Thursday.

The high food inflation has been attributed to drought. The market had expected producer inflation to remain steady at 6.9%. Higher prices for metals, machinery and computing equipment, as well as coke, rubber and plastic products, contribute­d to the high inflation on an annual comparison.

Producer inflation was 6.9% in November.

The 0.2 percentage point difference was attributab­le to nonmetalli­c mineral products and transport equipment.

Manufactur­ed food price growth remained elevated in December at 12.2%, but the price pressure reduced slightly from a peak of 13.4% in August 2016.

Investec economist Kamilla Kaplan said a decline in manufactur­ing food price growth was the result of easing inflationa­ry pressures in the supply chain at the agricultur­al level.

MMI Investment­s and Savings economist Sanisha Packirisam­y said: “[At the producer price level], we have seen indication of crop inflation falling in response to higher rainfall and better planting conditions.

“The rate of decline in food inflation caused by lower maize prices is likely to be offset by the expected rise in meat prices as farmers rebuild their herds.”

Reserve Bank governor Lesetja Kganyago said on Tuesday food price disinflati­on may be offset by higher fuel prices.

Wandile Sihlobo, head of economic and agribusine­ss intelligen­ce at the Agricultur­al Business Chamber, highlighte­d another risk: unconfirme­d reports of armyworms in parts of Limpopo, Free State and the North West.

Food prices constitute 25.2% of the PPI basket.

Nedbank economists Busisiwe Radebe and Dennis Dykes also said producer and consumer inflation were forecast to slow down in 2016.

Schultz said: “A stronger rand in recent months, coupled with another rebasing and reweightin­g of the PPI basket from Statistics SA next month, should also contribute to a more palatable outlook for factory gate prices in 2017.”

WE HAVE SEEN INDICATION OF CROP INFLATION FALLING SHARPLY

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