CPI falls on lower transport costs
HA NOI (VNS) - Viet
Nam's consumer price index (CPI) fell in November 2014 by 0.27 per cent
month-on-month largely because of decreasing transport costs, the General
Statistics Office (GSO) revealed yesterday.
This is the
second time the country's CPI has decreased since last March, when prices
fell by 0.44 per cent from February.
The CPI increased
in November by 2.6 per cent year-on-year, which was lower than the 3.23-per
cent year-on-year increase last October but still the lowest CPI in the past
10 years, the GSO noted.
Do Thi Ngoc,
deputy head of the GSO's CPI Department, attributed the decline to the 20-per
cent fall in the retail prices of petrol, leading to a sharp reduction in
transport costs of up to 2.75 per cent month-on-month, thereby contributing
to a 0.24-per cent CPI decrease.
"Transport
costs will continue to fall in the future," Ngoc said, adding that gas
prices likewise posted a remarkable decrease. In addition, the prices of
building materials and housing fell by 0.74 per cent.
Notably, the food
and restaurant services groups, which account for the biggest portion of the
CPI basket of goods and services, decreased by 0.03 per cent while the
telecommunications group decreased by 0.01 per cent.
Seven of 11 goods
in the basket saw a slight increase of 0.03 to 0.34 per cent. In particular,
shoes, garments and textiles increased by 0.34 per cent because of a rise in
demand for clothing during the cold season.
Entertainment and
tourism increased by 0.1 per cent while education increased by 0.03 per cent
and health care services, by 0.04 per cent.
Ngoc observed
that the CPI this month reached its lowest level since 2009. This is abnormal
because the index usually increases during the year-end months, she added.
The November CPI
in the country's two big cities fell by 0.30 and 0.36 per cent. Other
localities such as Da Nang, Hai Phong and Can Tho experienced the same
decrease. In November, gold averaged VND3.5 million per tael and the US
dollar, VND21,350.
Low 2014 CPI
Vietnamese Prime
Minister Nguyen Tan Dung also said last week that Viet Nam's inflation this
year would likely be below three per cent, its lowest level in decades.
Economist Ngo Tri
Long agreed, saying the low CPI would have both positive and negative effects
on the economy.
Long revealed
that at the end of the third quarter, the country's GDP growth rate reached
5.62 per cent, so the growth rate for the entire year was expected to reach
5.8 per cent because of an expected increase in foreign direct investments
and overseas Vietnamese remittances in the year-end months.
A CPI at 4.5 to
five per cent will have a positive impact while that at three per cent will
result in higher inventory, low purchasing power, decreasing investment and
slow consumption, he added.
However, Long
suggested that the Government refrain from increasing prices now, as high
inventory, lower demand and increasing bad debts were causing the drop in the
inflation rate.
If prices are
increased, purchasing power will fail to recover and consequently, production
will fail to improve, he warned. - VNS
|
Thứ Hai, 24 tháng 11, 2014
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét