Malawi’s inflation rate is expected to rise as the country is in the lean season in terms of food availability, an investment management and advisory firm has said.
In its September 2018 economic outlook, Nico Asset Managers Limited, a subsidiary of listed financial services group Nico Holdings plc, noted that the food inflation will continue to rise largely due to the lean season that has begun much earlier in September rather than the usual October.
The inflation rate has been on the upward movement from July this year due to rising prices of maize, which, as part of food, constitutes 45.2 percent in the consumer price index (CPI), which measures changes in the price level of market basket of consumer goods and services.
Reads the Nico Asset report in part: “In addition, the below average market supply of maize and the institutional purchases being 17 percent above, the average price for most markets will exert pressure on food inflation.”
Maize is now selling at K7 500 per 50 kilogramme bag in most markets in the country.
Malawi is experiencing maize deficit with almost 3.3 million people being food insecure, according to 2018 Malawi Vulnerability Assessment Committee (Mvac) report.
Economics Association of Malawi (Ecama) executive director Maleka Thula said inflation is expected to worsen in the remaining months of this year.
“Non-food inflation is likely to be higher than earlier projected,” he said.
However, Thula said the development is not expected to distort the inflation trajectory as projected by the authorities.
“Thus, inflation can still be projected to average between nine percent and 10 percent for 2018. What remains key in influencing the magnitude of the upturn in inflation is how market players build their expectations regarding this development,” he said.
At its recent Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, Reserve Bank of Malawi (RBM) noted that the rise in maize prices, global fuel prices and electricity tariffs were some of the risks to the inflation outlook.
In the last farming season, maize output dropped by 28.4 percent compared to the previous year and was 20.3 percent below the five-year average, according Famine Early Warning System Network (FewsNet).
But non-food inflation, which has been flat for the past months, is now expected to rise, pushed by the recent price hikes in electricity and fuel, according to Nico Asset Managers.
This means that both food and non-food inflation are expected to exert pressure on the inflation rate which marginally increased from nine percent in July to 9.3 percent in August 2018, according to the National Statistical Organisation (NSO).