Consumer price indices - inflation - February 2016
Prices of automotive fuel continued to decline
Publication Date: 09. 03. 2016
Product Code: 012024-16
Consumer prices in February rose compared with January by 0.1%. The price development was primarily due to a growth of prices in 'recreation and culture' and 'food and non-alcoholic beverages'. The year-on-year rise in consumer prices was 0.5% in February, i.e. 0.1 percentage point down on January.
The month-on-month increase in consumer prices in 'recreation and culture' came primarily from the rise in prices of package holidays by 5.0%. In 'food and non-alcoholic beverages', prices of vegetables went particularly up by 3.3%, sausages and smoked meat by 1.0%, chocolate and chocolate-based products by 3.8%, rolls and baguettes by 1.9%, fruit by 0.5%. In 'furnishings, household equipment and routine household maintenance', prices of furniture increased especially by 1.8% and household appliances by 1.4%. In 'alcoholic beverages and tobacco', prices of spirits went up by 2.2%, beer by 0.5% and tobacco products by 0.4%. In 'miscellaneous goods and services', prices of beauty products increased by 2.3%.
A month-on-month drop in the price level came particularly from a decline in 'transport', where a decrease in automotive fuel prices continued for the seventh month and amounted to -3.9% in February. The average price of petrol Natural 95 (26.79 CZK per litre) was the lowest since April 2009 and the average price of diesel oil (25.45 CZK per litre) since March 2009. In 'clothing and footwear', prices of garments and prices of shoes and other footwear fell (-1.0% and -0.9%, respectively). In 'health', prices of pharmaceutical products were lower by 0.5%. In food, prices of flour went down by 3.3%, pork by 1.9%, milk by 3.1%, yoghurts by 1.5%, oils and fats by 2.0%, sugar by 1.8%, coffee by 2.3%.
Prices of goods in total dropped by 0.1% and prices of services went up by 0.2%.
The biggest influence on the growth of the price level in February came from prices in 'alcoholic beverages and tobacco', which went up by 3.2%. Next in order of influence were prices in 'recreation and culture' due mainly to the rise in prices of package holidays by 8.3% and prices in 'housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels'. In 'clothing and footwear', prices of garments and prices of shoes and other footwear were higher (1.0% and 7.6%, respectively). In 'restaurants and hotels', prices of catering services and accommodation services were higher (1.1% and 0.5%, respectively).
A reduction in the y-o-y price level came, as before, from the price drop in 'food and non-alcoholic beverages' and in 'transport'. In 'food and non-alcoholic beverages', many items recorded a slowdown in the y-o-y price drop and thus their impact on the reduction in the price level. Prices of bread and cereals were lower by 0.8% in February (-1.4% in January), meat by 1.7% (-2.1% in January), eggs by 9.7% (-11.0% in January), yoghurts by 8.8% (-9.9% in January), oils and fats by 5.3% (-5.8% in January). The growth of fruit prices accelerated to 3.2% in February (2.6% in January) and prices of potatoes to 51.6% (46.2% in January). In 'transport', the y-o-y drop in automotive fuel prices, which started in December 2014 and amounted to -11.1% in February, continued. The decline in prices continued in 'communication'.
Prices of goods in total decreased by 0.1% and prices of services went up by 1.5%. The overall consumer price index excluding imputed rentals was 100.4%, year-on-year.
Inflation rate, i.e. the increase in the average consumer price index in the twelve months to February 2016 compared with the average CPI in the previous twelve months, amounted to 0.4% in February.
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Starting from January 2016, the consumer price indices are calculated with updated weights, which are derived from the household expenditures in 2014. The new calculated indices are chained at all levels of the consumer basket with the original base period average of 2005 = 100. Thereby, a continuation of the existing index time series average of 2005 = 100, from which indices to other bases will be derived (previous month = 100, corresponding period of last year = 100 and annual rolling average, i.e. the average of index numbers over the last 12 months to the average for the previous 12 months) will be ensured.
New consumer basket is available on the web pages CZSO: consumer basket.
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1) So far, imputed rentals have been excluded from the HICP
Notes:
Responsible manager of the CZSO: Jiri Mrazek, Department Director, email:
Contact: Pavla Sediva, phone (+420) 274052138, email: pavla.sediva@csu.gov.cz
Method of data collection: Direct field survey of prices, centrally surveyed prices and reporting
End of data collection: 20th day of the reference month / End of data processing: 3rd day of the month that follows the reference month
Related publications: 012018-16 Consumer Price Indices – Basic Breakdown (periodicity: monthly) and 012019-16 Consumer Price Indices – Detailed Breakdown (periodicity: annually)
Related documents available on the CZSO website: 012023-16 Consumer Price Indices – Detailed Breakdown (periodicity: monthly)
https://csu.gov.cz/inflation-consumer-prices
Next News Release: 11 April 2016