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Viewing cable 06NAIROBI4378, Overall Inflation Climbs Again in Third Quarter

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06NAIROBI4378 2006-10-11 14:13 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Nairobi
VZCZCXYZ0000
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHNR #4378/01 2841413
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 111413Z OCT 06
FM AMEMBASSY NAIROBI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 4814
INFO RUEHXR/RWANDA COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY 2850
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC
UNCLAS NAIROBI 004378 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR AF/E, AF/RSA 
DEPT ALSO PASS TO USTR FOR BILL JACKSON 
TREASURY FOR LUKAS KOHLER 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958:  N/A 
TAGS: ECON EFIN EAGR KE
SUBJECT: Overall Inflation Climbs Again in Third Quarter 
 
REF: Nairobi 3261  Nairobi 1808 
 
1. After falling in the second quarter from the drought-induced 
March peak thanks to a good rainy season, overall inflation began 
climbing again in August.  Since September 2005, food prices have 
risen 20%, which impacts the poor most heavily.  Interest rates 
began rising in August.  The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) predicted 
that overall inflation would continue to rise in the next two months 
due to dry weather and high oil prices. However, the CBK raised its 
Central Bank Rate (CBR) 0.25% on August 2 and increased sales of 
securities to soak up excess liquidity to keep underlying (core) 
inflation within its 5% target level.  Underlying inflation, which 
excludes food, energy and transportation, also began increasing in 
August, but remains about 4%.  It appears the CBK will be able to 
keep monetary growth and inflation under control in 2006, and 
forecasters continue to predict economic growth over 5% in 2006. 
 
How the GOK Measures Inflation 
------------------------------ 
2. On a monthly basis, the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) 
releases Consumer Price Indices (CPI) and inflation rates for 
Nairobi and 12 other urban centers, and for lower and upper income 
groups in Nairobi.  The "overall" (headline) inflation rate is based 
on prices for 10 categories of goods and services.  The CBS measures 
"underlying" (core) inflation by removing the volatile categories of 
food and energy, but the CBK also removes transportation, since it 
relies so heavily on energy prices.  The CBK targets its underlying 
rate in its monetary policy planning and implementation. 
 
3. The titles the CBS, CBK and media use for the time series 
inflation measures are misleading and inconsistent.  Here are the 
translations. 
 
Month-on-Month or 12-month: Actually year-on-year (YOY) change in 
prices, since it compares the CPI in the current month with the CPI 
in same month in the previous year. 
 
Average Annual: Compares average CPI for the last 12 months with the 
average CPI of the preceding 12 months.  This measure serves as the 
seasonally-adjusted inflation rate, and is less volatile. 
 
Overall Inflation Rates Fall in Q2 with the Rains... 
--------------------------------------------- ----- 
4.  Overall inflation climbed into the double digits in January 
2006, when failure of the October 2005 rains created or perpetuated 
drought in many parts of Kenya, driving up food prices.  When the 
next rainy season began on schedule in March, food price increases, 
especially in the basket of basic vegetables that form the basic 
diet for lower income people, decelerated or declined, and the CPI 
began falling.  In March 2006, YOY overall inflation peaked at 
19.15% and average annual (seasonally adjusted) peaked at 11.36%, 
the highest rates in more than two years.  April-July, both rates 
declined steadily, as food, energy and transportation inflation 
decelerated.  The CBK welcomed the declining CPI and predicted it 
would continue. 
 
But Increase Again in August. 
----------------------------- 
5. In August, food and fuel prices accelerated again, driving the 
CPI and overall inflation up.  The distribution of rains across the 
March-May rainy season had been uneven, reducing vegetable 
production on rain-fed farms, causing markets to rely on irrigated 
farms, with their higher prices.  Higher fuel prices and 
inefficiencies in production, transportation and marketing also 
drove prices up.  YOY overall inflation rose 11.5% in August and 
13.8% in September.  Average annual jumped from 11.4% in August to 
12.1% in September, the highest rate observed so far in 2006.  The 
CBS noted that food prices in September 2006 rose 20% YOY, followed 
by energy prices at 11.9%, alcohol and tobacco at 9.2%, 
transportation and communication at 8.5%, and housing at 3.7%.  The 
other five categories rose 2%-3%.  Although it had predicted in 
early August that food prices would stabilize and inflation would 
continue to fall, by early September the CBK acknowledged that food 
prices and inflation were once again on the rise.  In its October 6 
weekly report, the CBK predicted that overall inflation would 
continue to rise in October and November due to dry weather and high 
international oil prices. 
 
6. The price increases hit the low income group in Nairobi hardest, 
since CBS weights food expenditure at 56% of their expenditure.  CBS 
weights food expenditure in the other urban centers at 50%.  Facing 
such weights and such high inflation, econoff asked analysts from 
CBS, CBK and other agencies how the over half the population 
allegedly living on $1/day avoided starvation.  The analysts 
acknowledged the CPI survey did not cover rural areas, where the 
majority of the population resides, nor the food that urban 
residents receive from their families' farms.  They also guessed 
that uncounted remittances from Kenyans abroad (estimated by the 
Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) at about $685 million in 2006) 
helped many Kenyans survive price increases.  They were eagerly 
waiting for the results of the nation-wide, district level household 
survey CBS completed at the end of May to help them refine their 
analyses and produce a clearer, more comprehensive picture. 
 
7. In addition to the rising prices of goods and services, the CBK 
was also facing other inflationary pressures.  Confronted with 
unexpected growth in the money supply and high liquidity levels due 
to strong dollar inflows from remittances, plus a strong growth 
outlook for 2006, the CBK raised the Central Bank Rate (CBR) from 
9.75% to 10% on August 2.  Over the next two months, the CBK also 
increased its purchases of repurchase agreement securities (repos) 
to soak up excess liquidity.  In response, interest rates on GOK 
T-bills, repos and interbank loans all rose.  T-bill rates have been 
rising for the last nine weeks.  In the October 5 auction, the 
91-days Treasury bill rate increased by 12 basis points to 6.79 
percent, while the average 182-day Treasury bill rate increased by 
26 basis points to 8.25 percent.  In early October, the CBK decided 
to maintain the CBR at 10% because underlying inflation remained 
under control. 
 
Underlying Inflation Rises More Slowly 
-------------------------------------- 
8. The CBK's underlying inflation rate, which excludes food, energy, 
and transport and communications because of their volatility, fell 
from a peak of 4.9% YOY in December 2005 to 3.6% YOY in July.  In 
August, underlying inflation rose to 3.9% YOY, and then to 4% in 
September.  However, average annual underlying inflation (seasonally 
adjusted) has been declining steadily in 2006, falling from 5.4% in 
December 2005 to 4% in September 2006.  The CBK therefore reports it 
has inflation under control. 
 
Comment 
------- 
9. Kenya's government and private sector analysts agree the GOK 
needs to improve their understanding of Kenyan household income and 
spending patterns in different geographic and income sectors, and 
more finely tune its price collection and analysis techniques to 
provide more effective information to guide monetary and fiscal 
policies.  One could argue that CBK, by narrowing its definition of 
core inflation, has set itself too easy a target for controlling 
inflation.  If the October-December rains are adequate and evenly 
distributed, both geographically and temporally, food prices and 
inflation will likely begin to fall before the end of 2006.  Or not. 
 The GOK has announced other policies that could also, over the 
longer run, reduce costs for producers, like improvements in 
transportation, power and telecomm infrastructure, or increase 
efficiencies in the food marketing chain. 
 
HOOVER