The Central Bank reported yesterday that food prices rose by 3.9 per cent in February, but core inflation (which excludes food prices) fell by 0.1 per cent.
In its monetary policy announcement for March 2025, the Central Bank noted that both domestic and international factors contributed to the upward drift in food prices faced by local consumers.
"The recent 7 per cent increase in the price of cement is nonetheless expected to have an important knock on effect on construction costs," said the Central Bank.
On the growth front, the Bank said the decline in oil and natural gas output, based on maturing fields, continued to pose a challenge to overall production of energy-based exports over the short run.
It said data from the Ministry of Energy pointed to a year-on year reduction in the production of crude oil (-1.9 per cent) and natural gas (-0.8 per cent) during the third quarter of 2024.
However, the report highlighted that petrochemical output improved with ammonia and methanol production rising by 16.1 per cent and 1.1 per cent, respectively.
Meanwhile, the Bank said in the non-energy sector, the latest available GDP data from the Central Statistical Office (CSO) for the first half of 2024 highlighted positive performances in the manufacturing and finance sectors, but these were somewhat offset by declines in the construction and accommodation services sectors.
“More recent indicators, including distribution, finance, new car sales, and visitor arrivals for Carnival 2025, point to relative buoyancy in non-energy activities,” The Central Bank said.
It noted that while the Government tapped the domestic market for budget financing, banks were simultaneously able to boost their lending to the private sector.
“Private sector credit from the consolidated financial sector rose by 8.4 per cent (year-on-year) in January 2025 compared with 8.0 per cent a month earlier. Consumer loans grew by 11.6 per cent compared with 9.7 per cent for business credit and 6.4 per cent for real estate mortgage loans,” the report said.
The bank’s monetary policy report agreed to maintain the repo rate at 3.50 per cent.