Consumers Price Index – September Quarter 2020

Sep 4, 2020 | Economic Latest Posts

Key facts

Quarterly Change

In the September  2020 quarter compared with June  2020 quarter, the consumer price index (CPI) increased by 0.92  percent and the Underlying CPI by 2.1 percent.

  • Household contents and household maintenance group rose by 3.3  percent driven by increase in prices of Household Appliance (up 37.5 percent) and Furniture and furnishings subgroups (up 3.9 percent).
  • Food prices rose by 3.3 percent, influenced by increase in prices of meat (up 9.1 percent), Fish and sea food (up 7.8 percent), Food products (up 6.0 percent), confectionery (up by 2.8 percent) coffee tea and cocoa (up by 2.5 percent each) Mineral water, soft drinks, fruit and vegetable juices (up by 2.3 percent).
  • Restaurants and accommodation services prices rose by 2.7 percent, influenced by increase in prices of catering services (up 2.8 percent)
  • Clothing and Footwear (up 2.6 percent)  followed by Housing and household utilities (up by 1.6 percent), Health (up by 1.1 percent) and Miscellaneous group (up by 0.1 percent)
  • All these increases were offset by the fall in the Transport group (fell by 3.5 percent ) followed by Recreation & Culture group (down by 2.8 percent) and Communication (decreasing by 0.3 percent) with cheaper Operation of personal transport equipment, telephone & telefax equipment’s and audio & computer equipment.

Annual Change

From the September 2019 quarter to the September 2020 quarter, the CPI inflation rate was 1.6 percent with the Underlying CPI of 3.6 percent.

  • Food prices increased by 5.1 per cent
  • Alcohol and Tobacco group decreased by 0.01 per cent
  • Transport group decreased by 6.1 per cent

Information about CPI

The Consumer Price Index covers price changes of the basket of goods and services consumed by all households on Rarotonga (the main island).

The base year is 2006. Prices are collected for 205 items and from selected outlets around Rarotonga. Individual prices are combined using weights from the Household Expenditure Survey (HES) conducted in 2004/5. The HES information was used to select the basket of goods and services.

The inclusion of an underlying measure is a recent improvement and it is published at the same time as the CPI. The underlying measure excludes items of a highly volatile nature, items that are subject to policy changes.

It excludes all locally produced fruits, vegetables, meat and fish, international airfares, mortgage interest, government rent, postal and telecommunication charges, electricity charges, tobacco and alcohol, petrol and diesel.

The CPI is computed using the Laspeyres price index formula.

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