The
economy’s pace of expansion slowed in the first quarter of 2013 from a year
ago, as consumer inflation jumped to 11.1 percent in May -- drifting further
from the Central Bank’s single-digit comfort zone.
Gross
Domestic Product expanded at 6.7 percent between January-March from 10.3
percent in the first quarter of 2012, and May inflation was revised from 10.9
percent to 11.1 percent using a widened inflation basket and a new Consumer
Price Index (CPI) base-year, the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) said on
Wednesday.
Services
continue to lubricate the country’s economic engine as GDP in the sector
increased by 12 percent year-on-year in the period, with agriculture growing by
1.1 percent and industry contracting by 0.8 percent. On quarter-on-quarter
basis, GDP slumped by 3.1 percent.
The adjusted quarter-on-quarter data also showed
crop production, including cocoa, shrinking by 4.9 percent and a 5 percent
contraction in the forestry sector. Mining and quarrying grew by 1.4 percent,
but construction and manufacturing slowed by 6.1 percent and 1.5 percent
respectively.
Declines were also recorded in financial and insurance
activities (-4.8 percent), information and communication (-1.5 percent), and hotel
and restaurants (-3.6 percent). Public administration, health and other
personal services however grew healthily, at 14 percent, 6.1 percent and 10
percent respectively in quarter-on-quarter terms.
Government has forecast an expansion of 8 percent in
GDP this year, and is aiming to tame a significant deficit that has been fuelling
inflationary pressure. The GSS’s new inflation data show that the figure rose
from 10.1 percent in January to 11.1 percent in May.
The inflation figures were revised after the GSS
increased the items in the basket from 242 to 267, dropping some constituents
while adding others, and changed the weights to reflect current consumption
patterns. The CPI base year was also changed from 2002 to 2012.
“Household consumption patterns change over time in
response to a change in products and incomes. It is therefore necessary to
revise the rates regularly so as to bring them in line with the current
spending patterns of the population,” said acting Government Statistician Dr.
Philomena Nyarko.
She said even as consumer inflation rose, producer
inflation decreased to 8.6 percent in May from 10.6 percent in April. The
decline in international gold prices caused a contraction of 1.9 percent in mining
and quarrying producer inflation, she said.
The price of gold, the economy’s
number-one export earner, has slumped by more than 26 percent this year, and
the cedi has depreciated by more than 4 percent, weighed down by strong foreign
exchange demand and the fall in commodity prices.
Finance Minister Seth Terkper said
in May that apart from the shortfall in fiscal revenues in the first four
months of the year, a further risk to Government’s budget emanates from falling
international commodity prices and import demand pressures.
Government, he said, will streamline
its expenditure and request Parliament to enact new tax measures to keep its 9
percent of GDP fiscal deficit target on track. The deficit between
January-April, Mr. Terkper said, was GH¢3.4billion -- equivalent to 3.8 percent
of GDP but higher than the target of GH¢2.7billion, or 3 percent of GDP.
Spending on wages in the period was
GH¢3billion against a projection of GH¢2.8billion, while interest expenditure
amounted to GH¢1.6billion compared to an estimate of GH¢1.1billion.
Most of the new fiscal measures, Mr.
Terkper said, will have sunset clauses because they are only meant to fix the
current problems.
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