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Sri Lanka inflation rate surges to 70.2% in August 2022

Reuters

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Sri Lanka inflation rate surges to 70.2% in August 2022

FISHING. A local fisherman collects dried fish carcasses near a port in Mannar, Sri Lanka, August 16, 2022.

Joseph Campbell/Reuters

Food prices climb 84.6%, while prices of non-food items rise 57.1%

Consumer inflation in Sri Lanka accelerated to 70.2% in August, the statistics department said on Wednesday, September 21, as the island nation reels under its worst economic crisis in decades.

The National Consumer Price Index (NCPI) rose 70.2% last month from a year earlier, after a 66.7% increase in July, the Department of Census and Statistics said in a statement.

Food prices climbed 84.6%, while prices of non-food items rose 57.1%.

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka said in August that the inflation rate would moderate after peaking at about 70% as the country’s economy slowed.

The NCPI captures broader retail price inflation and is released with a lag of 21 days every month.

The more closely monitored Colombo Consumer Price Index, released at the end of each month, rose 64.3% in August. It acts as a leading indicator for national prices and shows how inflation is evolving in Sri Lanka’s biggest city.

Sri Lanka’s economy shrank 8.4% in the quarter through June from a year ago in one of the steepest declines seen in a three-month period, amid fertilizer and fuel shortages.

“Inflation is expected to taper from September,” said Dimantha Mathew, head of research for Colombo-based investment firm First Capital.

“However, inflation is only likely to moderate and reach single digits in the second half of 2023.”

An acute dollar shortage, caused by economic mismanagement and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, has left Sri Lanka struggling to pay for essential imports including food, fuel, fertilizer, and medicine.

The country earlier this month reached a preliminary deal with the International Monetary Fund for a loan of about $2.9 billion, contingent on it receiving financing assurances from official creditors and negotiations with private creditors. – Rappler.com

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