Annual inflation declined to 6.7% in April, 0.3% lower than March. Prices increased by 0.3% m/m. The lower annual figure was due to moderation of food price inflation with is currently at 5.8% y/y, down from its 2016 average of 10.4%. Of the twelve basket items, only two saw a higher annual inflation rate, four remained unchanged, while seven categories saw lower rates of price increases. Prices for goods increased 5.6% y/y while prices for services grew 8.2% y/y, with slower growth in goods prices supported by a stronger Namibian dollar.
Housing and utilities remains the largest contributor to annual inflation due to its large weighting in the basket and the effect of irregularly high rental increases of 9.7% in January. Annual inflation in this basket category declined to 9.6% in March as the rental payments subcategory was adjusted downward by 0.1% on a m/m basis and have remained at that level in April. Furthermore an 8% tariff increase has been approved by the Electricity Control Board effective 1 July, which should put upwards pressure on this basket item going forward. We continue to expect the housing and utilities basket category to underpin overall inflation.
Food and non-alcoholic beverages, the second largest basket item, was the second largest contributor to annual inflation, accounting for 1.0% of the total 6.7% inflation. Food and non-alcoholic beverage prices increased by 5.8% y/y, a further slowdown compared to the 7.3% increase in March, and was below the peak of 13.2% witnessed in January. The slowdown in annual food and non-alcoholic beverage inflation was partly due to base effects as well as lower inflation on agricultural produce resulting from good rainy seasons in parts of South Africa. Bread and cereal prices have moderated to 0.9% y/y, the price of vegetables have decreased by 1.3% y/y and fruits are 0.8% more expensive on an annual basis. While annual growth in coffee, tea, and cocoa prices has slowed slightly, this subcategory has still seen prices increase by 22.4% on a y/y basis, the quickest in the food basket. Fish prices are also still significantly up over last year at 15.8%.
Transport is one of the two basket categories which saw an annual increase in April. This was driven largely by the 8.2% y/y increase in the price of vehicles, but also by the 8.1% y/y increase in the operational cost largely due to higher fuel prices than last year.
The Alcohol and tobacco category displayed increases of 3.9% y/y and 0.4% m/m in April versus 4.4% y/y and 0.4% m/m in March. The main driver in this basket category remains alcohol prices which increased by 4.2%y/y while tobacco was up 2.5% y/y. Normally the effect of sin taxes result in average increases of 4.1% over the months of March and April, thus the increase of only 0.8% over those two months this year is unusually low, especially considering that sin tax increases have been larger than previous years.
Namibian inflation is decreasing at a faster pace than we anticipated at the start of the year. A strengthening rand on a y/y basis has driven a decrease in goods inflation specifically. Oil prices remain relatively stable at around US$50 to US$55/barrel, and the end of the regional drought has brought some relief to consumers with some food prices declining. The recent downgrade of South Africa’s credit rating however, has seen the rand depreciate somewhat, and more weakness could follow if local currency ratings are downgraded. This will flow through to inflation and could cause South African inflation to remain above the 3% to 6% target range for longer than expected. We also expect Namibian inflation to remain elevated in the short term, averaging around 7.4% for the year.