Government Statistician Dr. Philomena Nyarko this
week expressed worry over the trend of rising utility prices as this has a drastic
impact on the cost of living for households in the country.
In October 2013, government announced major hikes in
electricity and water tariffs after more than a year of subsidies.
The hikes
were followed by increases in January and July, causing power and water tariffs
to jump by 96 percent and 72 percent respectively over nine months.
“It will really impact on households. The tempo at
which utilities are rising is worrying, and we are hoping that policies will be
put in place to arrest the situation,” Dr. Nyarko said.
Utilities inflation surged to 56.9 percent in June she
told a media conference in Accra while announcing the annualised producer price
index (PPI) for last month.
She said annual producer inflation rose to a fresh
four-year high of 33.1 percent, driven mainly by utility price increases.
The index has steadily increased this year after the
government removed subsidies on power and water as part of measures to cut
spending. The monthly inflation rate was 0.7 percent.
After utilities, mining and quarrying inflation was the next
highest at 37.3 percent. The manufacturing sub-sector recorded an inflation
rate of 27.1 percent.
Manufacturing recorded a monthly inflation rate of
0.8 percent while mining and quarrying recorded 0.7 percent.
The utilities
sub-sector recorded the lowest monthly rate of 0.2 percent.
Five out of the 16 major groups in the manufacturing
sub-sector recorded inflation rates higher than the sector average of 27.1
percent.
Manufacture of machinery and equipment recorded the highest of
76 percent, while producer prices in the manufacture of wood and wood products
recorded the lowest producer inflation rate of 2.3 percent over the one-year
period.
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