Higher Tet food prices result in slight CPI expansion
The February consumer price index (CPI) inched up 0.42% month on month and 1.27% year on year, mainly driven by high food demand during the Lunar New Year (Tet) holiday, the General Statistics Office (GSO) reported.
Eight of the 11 main goods and services categories saw their prices increase from January, including food and catering services (1.98%), beverages and cigarette (1.15%), and apparel, hats and footwear (0.45%).
Price declines were recorded in housing and building materials (0.41%), transport (3.96%), and post and telecommunications (0.16%).
In the category of food and catering services, a 0.66% increase in grain food prices was the main driver of the CPI growth due to soaring demand in preparation for Tet in early February, said Deputy Director of the GSO’s Price Statistics Department Do Thi Ngoc.
Rises in grain-foods and foodstuff prices, in turn, fuelled outdoor eating and drinking costs.
Although public transport fares hiked 3.45% due to a surge in travel demand before and after Tet, domestic petrol prices were down by 9.29% from January, helping overall transport prices shrink by 3.96%, Ngoc said.
In February, core inflation (the CPI without grain food – fresh foodstuffs, energy, and medical and educational services which are under the State’s management) grew by 0.56% from a month earlier and 1.93% from the same period last year.
The Price Statistics Department forecast CPI in March will expand at a faster pace than that of this month, mostly due to the planned augmentation of medical service prices.