Malaysia’s 7.7 percent inflation rate

We’re seeing the inflation rate shooting through the roof in June 2008 due to the increased fuel prices and it’s spin-off effects. Foreign news wires have begun picking up the news and here’s how the Associated Press has reported it two days ago:

Malaysia’s annual inflation rate spiraled to a 27-year high in June after a fuel price hike sent the cost of food and transport soaring, the government said.

Consumer prices in June rose 7.7 percent compared with the same month in 2007, more than double the 3.8 percent annual inflation rate recorded in May, according to data released late Wednesday by the Statistics Department.

Food and nonalcoholic beverages, which account for 31 percent of the price index, spiked 10 percent from a year ago. Transport expenditure surged 19.6 percent; alcoholic beverages and tobacco costs climbed 9.2 percent.

“The main reason for this increase is due to the substantial rise in the price of petrol and diesel announced by the government,” the statistics department said.

The inflation figures underscore growing public frustrations over the higher cost of living after the government raised gasoline prices by 41 percent and diesel prices by 63 percent in early June to curb a runaway subsidy bill.

Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Shahrir Samad said June’s inflation rate was the highest since April 1981, when consumer prices rose 10.8 percent.

Shahrir said annual inflation would likely remain above 7 percent in July because the government raised electricity tariffs by 18 percent for households and an average of 26 percent for commercial and industry users.

Central Bank Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz was noncommittal Thursday about whether the sharper-than-expected rise in inflation will prompt the bank to raise its key overnight policy rate — used by banks to set lending rates — which has been unchanged at 3.5 percent since 2006.

“We’re going to do what is in the best interest of the country,” Zeti told reporters, adding that the bank will consider factors such as whether inflation would increase and affect economic growth.

The government has said inflation may cross 5 percent in 2008, but it has pledged not to further raise fuel prices this year. Inflation was around 2 percent last year.

Malaysia’s consumer price index is calculated based on retail prices of 460 items in nearly 25,000 outlets nationwide.

Now, the big question is, will there be worse to come? If Vietnam can record a 27 percent inflation rate in July 2008, can this be a possibility here too? Anyway, here’s also a comment from the BBC about inflation hitting Asian growth this year.

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