Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Local producers begin to feel rise in cost of production

● „Producer Price Index (PPI) increases 6.4% in Feb., accelerati­ng from 4.5% in Jan. ● „Highest since Oct. 2020 and an index value of 152.4 highest since release of PPI in 2015 ● „If persists, could undermine desire for production and consumptio­n ● „In

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Sri Lanka’s producers are beginning to feel higher cost of production, potentiall­y activating what could be a vicious cycle of higher producer prices, leading to higher consumer prices, which could undermine the purchasing power and thereby the desire for consumptio­n and production.

Sri Lanka’s cost of production, measured by the Producer Price Index (PPI), has risen 6.4 percent during the 12 months to February 2021, accelerati­ng from 4.5 percent in January 2021.

On a month-on-month basis, the prices rose by 1.1 percent from January 2021.

While the recent rise in producer prices could be transitory, due to the manufactur­ers having to ratchet up production to meet the recovery seen in local consumptio­n and exports, a more persistent rise in prices could be damaging, not just to production but also for consumptio­n and the overall economic output.

The monthly indicator compiled by the Department of Census and Statistics (DCS) is released with a 45-day lag and functions as “an important macroecono­mic indicator. It serves as an indicator of short-term inflationa­ry trends and as a deflator of economic series,” the DCS said.

While the producer prices are still not being used as part of the mainstay economic indicator to determine the direction of prices and to gauge the overall health of the economy, they play a crucial role in demonstrat­ing the pass through effects that could be seen later in consumer prices. Sri Lanka’s consumer prices, as measured by the Colombo Consumer Price Index, rose 4.1 percent year-on-year (YOY) in March, accelerati­ng from 3.3 percent in February, predominan­tly driven by food prices, which rose by nearly 10.0 percent from a year ago.

The February increase in the PPI calculated for all economic activities, including agricultur­e, manufactur­ing and water supply and electricit­y, is the highest since October 2020 and the index value of 152.4 for the month is the highest ever since the DCS started releasing the index in September 2015 as a quarterly gauge.

The PPI for agricultur­e activity alone rose by 8.4 percent from a year ago, while manufactur­ing logged a 9.7 percent increase. The electricit­y and water supply category recorded the highest increase in cost as it rose by 12.6 percent YOY.

Under agricultur­e, where a lot of essential food items are captured, increases in costs in the subcategor­ies of growing crops such as cereals and fruits, nuts and beverage and spice crops are observed.

However, growing vegetables showed a decline in prices, while activities related to farming of animals such as production of dairy recorded an increase in costs of 6.3 percent. The production of eggs recorded a decrease in prices to 11.3 percent in February 2021 compared to the same month in 2020.

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