Sri Lanka's key inflation rate falls to 0.5% in August
Demand is expected to stay muted in the approach to the crucial presidential election on Sept 21
SRI Lanka’s key inflation rate fell to 0.5 per cent in August on the year from 2.4 per cent last month, the statistics department said on Friday (Aug 30).
The Colombo Consumer Price Index, a leading indicator for broader national prices, tracks inflation in Colombo, the biggest city.
Prices in the food category decreased 0.8 per cent in August on the month from 1.5 per cent in July, while in the non-food category they also fell 0.4 per cent in August on the month from 2.8 per cent in July.
A drop of 22.5 per cent in electricity costs in July helped August inflation, analysts said, along with downward price adjustments to fuel, water and cooking gas.
Demand is expected to stay muted in the approach to the crucial presidential election on Sept 21.
“Almost everyone has suspended taking spending and investment decisions. Everything has come to a halt because of the political and policy uncertainty,” said Dimantha Mathew, research head at First Capital Holdings.
“Even in the month of September we will see this lack of demand in the system.”
Inflation is projected to remain about 2 percentage points below the central bank’s target of 5 per cent for the next seven months due to lower prices of power, fuel and food, a recent monetary policy report said.
Sri Lanka suffered record inflation after its worst financial crisis in decades pummelled the economy, which has stabilised since the island nation won a US$2.9-billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in March 2023.
The central bank expects the economy to grow 3 per cent in 2024 after last year’s contraction of 2.3 per cent. REUTERS
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