Wed, 26 May 2010 - 17:30
Administered Price Pressure
The latest CPI figures were released today by Stats SA, for the period ended
30 April 2010. Headline inflation came in at 4.8%, which is the lowest in
around 4 years, and lower than the forecasted 5.0%. The data released by
Stats SA contains a wealth of information, not just the headline inflation
number that gets widely reported. There are therefore many ways to slice and
dice this data depending on what you are looking for.
This month we will take a closer look at the inflation rate of administered
prices, and how it has changed when compared to the overall inflation rate.
Administered prices are defined on the Stats SA website as, "An administered
price is defined as the price of a product which is set consciously by an
individual producer or group of producers and/or any price which can be
determined or influenced by government, either directly or through a
government agency/institution without reference to market forces. Products
and services included are assessment rates, sanitary fees, refuse removal,
water, electricity, paraffin, petrol, public transport - trains, motor
licences, motor registration, telephone fees, postage, cell calls,
television licence, school fees, university/technicons/colleges and
university boarding fees."
This definition essentially encompasses those prices regulated by
government, whether the good/service is provided by government - like refuse
removal or water - or by other entities in which the government exercises
pricing control to a greater or lesser extent - like petrol or university
fees.
Below is a chart comparing the inflation rate for administered prices (both
regulated and unregulated goods and services) over 3 years, taken at 6 month
intervals, compared to the headline CPI rate. As at the end of April 2010,
administered prices accounted for nearly 15% of the total inflation basket.
It is interesting to note that over this period the regulated CPI has been
higher than overall inflation in all periods accept for 2009. Much of this
can be attributed to the high petrol and energy costs over this period, in
particular the petrol price raced up in 2008 as the price of a barrel of oil
neared $150 in June 2008. The subsequent crash of the price into the $30 -
$40 range is reflected in the 2009 numbers.
While the price of fuel gets a large part of the blame, other items in this
basket have been growing at rates higher than the average rate of inflation
including items like rates, water, electricity, and motor licensing and
registration. The income from these goods and services falls into various
government coffers, and is one way for government to increase revenue in
tough economic times without having to raise tax rates on more headline
items like income or VAT.
In a country that has an element of inflation targeting in monetary policy,
government needs to be wary that they don't inadvertently fuel the inflation
rate further by consistently increasing prices at a rate that is higher than
the maximum targeted inflation rate (6%). They need to delicately balance
the conflicting needs of income maximisation and price stability.
With headline inflation approaching the midpoint of its target range there
is potentially scope for the MPC to drop rates further at their next
meeting. With the committee setting policy on 12 - 18 month forecasts, it is
unlikely that they will drop rates again.
Take care,
Mike Browne
info@seedinvestments.co.za
www.seedinvestments.co.za
021 9144 966
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