By: Ben O. de Vera, Jovic Yee -:28
AM August 08, 2018
Higher food, fuel and transport
costs pushed inflation nationwide to 5.7 percent last month, the fastest rise
in over five years, the government said on Tuesday.
Surging inflation reduced a family’s
purchasing power of P10,000 last year to only P9,430 last month.
In Metro Manila, prices of basic
goods and services rose further to 6.5 percent, up from 5.8 percent in June and
2.9 percent in July last year.
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Inflation in July nationwide marked
the fifth straight month the rate has breached the central bank’s 2-4 percent
target for this year and next, leading some analysts to believe policymakers
would deliver a rate hike as much as 50 basis points on Thursday.
The inflation rate was near the top
end of the central bank’s 5.1-5.8 percent estimate for July.
Amid rising consumer prices, the
country’s economic managers assured the public that the government was moving
to temper inflation. They said inflation would taper off toward the end of the
year.
Food prices surge
In a report released on Tuesday, the
Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) attributed the increase in prices of
basic goods and services to a 7.1-percent year-on-year increase in the price of
food and nonalcoholic beverages.
Rice prices have further gone up
amid low grain inventory and depleted buffer stock of the National Food
Authority.
Declining rice inventory
“Part of the supply problem is the country’s declining rice stock inventory—caused by weather disturbances in the country and in other rice-producing countries like Thailand and Vietnam—which is taking a toll on the prices of rice,” Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno and Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia said in a joint statement.
“Part of the supply problem is the country’s declining rice stock inventory—caused by weather disturbances in the country and in other rice-producing countries like Thailand and Vietnam—which is taking a toll on the prices of rice,” Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno and Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia said in a joint statement.
They said the 2.36 million metric
tons of rice last month “declined by 8.2 percent year-on-year (from 2.57
million MT in July 2017 and dropping by 18.8 percent from the preceding month’s
2.91 million MT), with the National Food Authority’s rice buffer remaining
almost depleted.”
Jeepney fare
Another driver of inflation is
higher transport costs. Since July 9, minimum jeepney fare has been increased
to P9 from P8 because of rising pump prices of fuel.
At the same time, the excise on
cigarette further rose to P35 per pack starting July under the Tax Reform for
Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Act, up from P32.50 in January and P30 last
year.
The TRAIN law, which was implemented
on Jan. 1, jacked up or imposed new excise on cigarettes, sugary drinks, oil
products and vehicles, among other goods, to compensate for a higher tax-exempt
personal income.
At the Senate finance committee
hearing on the proposed P3.757-trillion national budget for 2019, Finance
Secretary Dominguez said the TRAIN law contributed 0.5 percentage point to
inflation.
Commodity groups
The PSA said the following commodity
groups brought about the higher prices in Metro Manila:
• Alcoholic beverages and tobacco,
up 21.9 percent year-on-year
• Transport, up 8.9 percent
• Housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels, up 8.2 percent
• Food and nonalcoholic beverages, up 7.2 percent
• Health, up 4.5 percent
• Clothing and footwear, up 2.4 percent
• Recreation and culture, up 1.1 percent
• Communication, up 0.6 percent.
• Transport, up 8.9 percent
• Housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels, up 8.2 percent
• Food and nonalcoholic beverages, up 7.2 percent
• Health, up 4.5 percent
• Clothing and footwear, up 2.4 percent
• Recreation and culture, up 1.1 percent
• Communication, up 0.6 percent.
Income loss
In the wake of the price increases,
workers saw their income go down by as much as P2,700 in the first six months.
Based on estimates of Ibon
Foundation, roughly 60 million Filipinos suffered an income loss of around P993
to P2,715 because of the higher-than-expected inflation.
The research group noted that the
peso’s continued depreciation, the rising price of oil on the global market and
the implementation of the TRAIN law were among the factors that drove up
inflation to 5.7 percent in July.
Wage hike
On Tuesday, labor groups lamented
that Ibon’s estimate showed that the recent P9 to P56 increase in the minimum
wage imposed by the Department of Labor and Employment was not enough to cover
at least P165 that workers lost to inflation monthly.
Nagkaisa labor coalition
spokesperson Rene Magtubo urged the government to fast-track its plan to flood
the market with basic goods, such as rice, sugar, cooking oil at affordable
prices to tame inflation.
The Federation of Free Workers urged
the Department of Trade and Industry to be more proactive in monitoring
businesses, which may take advantage of the situation. —With a report
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