Ghana inflation rate for December rises to 10.4%

The year-on-year inflation rate rose to 10.4 per cent in December compared to 9.8 per cent the previous month, the Ghana Statistical Service said on Wednesday.

The rate is 0.6 percentage point higher than the rate for November, 2020.

The month-on-month inflation between November and December 2020 was 0.9 per cent.

Professor Samuel Annim, the Government Statistician, at a press briefing attributed the increase in overall inflation to the high food inflation.

Food contributed 59.1 per cent to the overall inflation, the highest contribution recorded since April 2020, when COVID-19 started to affect Ghana.

He said without this increase, the year-on-year inflation would have been lower than last month.

The variation between Food (14.1 per cent) and Non-Food inflation (7.7 per cent) was 6.4 per cent, while the difference between locally produced items (12.1 per cent) and imported items (6.1 per cent) was 6 per cent

The month-on-month (November 2020 – December 2020) Food inflation was 1.5 per cent.

The Food inflation rate for the month of December was 14.1 per cent compared to the previous month of 11.7 per cent.

The Non-food Inflation was 7.7 per cent compared to the previous month of 8.3 per cent.

Meanwhile, the month-on-month Non-Food inflation was 1.5 per cent with inflation for locally produced items was 12.1 per cent with the inflation for imported items standing at 6.1 per cent.

Again like previous months, just two of the thirteen Divisions had higher than average inflation rates; ’Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas’ had 20.1 per cent down from 21.0 per cent last month and ‘Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages’ had 14.1 per cent up from 11.7 per cent last month.

On regional basis, the overall year-on-year inflation ranged from 2.1 per cent in the Upper West Region to 16.3 per cent in Greater Accra Region.

With the exception of Upper West Region with -0.4 per cent food inflation and 4.6 per cent non-food inflation, all regions recorded higher food inflation than non-food inflation.

Compared to last month, only Ashanti, Brong Ahafo and Upper West Region had a lower food inflation this month.

The biggest difference was recorded in Central Region with 3.5 per cent to 12.8 per cent.

Source: GNA

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