From all indications, the general increase in prices in T&T (the inflation rate) slowed significantly during the second half of 2023, continuing into the first month of 2024.
In its January 2024 Economic Bulletin, the Central Bank reported, “Headline inflation measured 0.7 per cent (year-on-year) in December 2023, according to data from the Central Statistical Office (CSO). This represented a decline from 4.7 per cent in July 2023.
“Retreating inflationary conditions were evident in both food and core inflation over the six-month period. Food inflation declined from 8.6 per cent in July 2023 to -1.1 per cent in December 2023, while core inflation moderated to 1.2 per cent in December 2023, down from 3.7 per cent in July 2023.”
In its most recent report on inflation, the CSO indicated that the all-items index of price changes (headline inflation) rose by 0.3 per cent in January 2024, compared to January 2023. That was driven by a 1.9 per cent decline in the index food for food and non-alcoholic beverages. The CSO reported that the average price of clothing and footware was 3.1 per cent lower in January 2024 than in January 2023; the category of housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels was 1.1 per cent lower in Januay 2024 than a year earlier and the categories of home ownership and furnishings, household equipment and routine maintenance of the house both declined by 1.6 per cent.
On the other hand, the category of alcoholic beverages and tobacco increased by 5.1 per cent in January 2024 compared to January 2023. And health was higher by 7.9 per cent, communication by 7 per cent and prices at hotels, cafes and restaurants rose by an average of 4.5 per cent between January 2023 and January 2024.
Headline inflation in December 2022 was 8.7 per cent, compared to a year earlier, while food and non-alcoholic beverages increased by 17.3 per cent between December 2021 and December 2022.
What this means is that inflation in T&T dropped from 8.7 per cent at the end of 2022 to 0.7 per cent at the end of 2023. Quite a remarkable achievement.
The reasons for the sharp increase in headline inflation in 2022 contain some hints about possible price trends in 2024.
In its May 2023 Article IV consultation report on T&T, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said the spike in prices in 2022 was driven by “imported energy and food prices, the partial liberalisation of fuel prices and domestic weather-related shocks.”
Of those three factors, it is clear that most countries in the world experienced higher energy and food prices in 2022 because of supply-chain disruptions and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
In its January 2024 Economic Bulletin, the Central Bank opined, “Though global inflationary pressure receded in 2023, major inflationary risks persisted with prospects for supply-side shocks related to geopolitical conflicts across the world.” The Central Bank is signalling the possibility that geopolitical conflicts could again have an impact on local inflation in T&T in 2024.
Central Bank Governor, Dr Alvin Hilaire, said in an interview with the Business Guardian in January that T&T imports 70 per cent of its inflation.
On the issue of the partial liberalisation of fuel prices in 2022, the Government instituted increases in the price of fuels in April and September 2022. By my calculation, the price of diesel went up by 29.3 per cent from $3.41 per litre to $4.41 per litre in that six-month period in 2022. Premium gasoline increased by 34.7 per cent from $5.75 to $7.75 per litre and super prices moved up by 40.2 per cent from $4.97 to $6.97 per litre.
Increasing fuel prices twice in 2022 would have reduced the subsidy on fuels, thereby improving the country’s fiscal position, but the increases would have had a significant pass-through impact on inflation in the T&T economy.
According to the May 2023 IMF Article IV report on T&T, “The transportation subcomponent of the consumer price index reached an annual inflation rate of 14.6 per cent in December 2022, up from just 2.2 per cent in March 2022.”
Would Minister of Finance, Colm Imbert, go for the full liberalisation of fuel prices in 2024? Not without some very clear analysis of the impact of higher fuel prices on the domestic economy, both in terms of the inflationary impact and the impact on the country’s fiscal fortunes.
In my view, the real unknown factor in local inflation this year is the impact of weather-related shocks, either a drought in the current dry season or flooding in the wet season in the latter half of 2024.
A study by the Economic Commission of Latin America and the Caribbean (Eclac) on the economic impact of the October 2018 flooding in Trinidad estimates that the cost of that event to the nation was US$12.6 million, equal to 0.05 per cent of GDP. But the Central Bank’s 2018 Annual Economic Survey does not mention the flooding event, stating, “Food inflation was relatively well contained in 2018, averaging 1.1 per cent. This compares with food inflation of 2.9 per cent in 2017.”
Minimum wage impact
For the year to date, the following entities have announced increases their prices: TCL (cement); Flow (cable and broadband); fast-food providers KFC and Starbucks, whose parent company is the publicly listed Prestige Holdings Ltd; fast-food providers Royal Castle and Rituals as well as Blue Waters.
In explaining the decision by Prestige Holdings to increase the prices of its KFC products, the company’s CEO Simon Hardy said, “The main jump for us was the minimum wage as we employ 3,300 people. We only made the changes on February 22. But inevitably, a business such as ours can’t, with an employee base such as ours, hold those prices forever. Just making a little comparison, you know. Everyone thinks that there’s a lot of profit being made. We are a high-sales business but a low-margin business, only 4.2 per cent of our sales is profit. So, we have a lot of sales, but it’s not a lot of profit.”
The prices of KFC products also went up in December.
The 17.1 per cent increase in minimum wage to $20.50 an hour from $17.50 an hour took effect on January 1, 2024.
The Central Bank’s November 2023 Monetary Policy Report contains a note titled ‘The impact of the increase in the minimum wage on inflation.’
In estimating the direct effect of the increase in the minimum wage on the general price level, the note states that applying the autoregressive distributed lag model suggests that the 17.1 per cent hike in the minimum wage increases the headline inflation rate immediately by an annualised 1.7 per cent.
“With the number of minimum wage earners currently accounting for 16 per cent of total persons employed, the potential total impacton headline inflation is assessed to be moderate,” said the Central Bank, adding: “However, should businesses adjust the prices of their goods and services in direct response to higher labour costs, when combined with an imminent increase in electricity tariffs and the implementation of the property tax, headline inflation could be impacted more significantly.”