Taiwan Sept inflation rate edges up slightly, but still below 3%
TAIPEI – Taiwan‘s inflation heated up in September, with the consumer price index (CPI) rising 2.75 percent from a year earlier, broadly in line with economists’ predictions though also below 3 percent for the second month in a row.
The pace quickened from 2.66 percent year-on-year reading for August, the Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics said in a statement on Thursday.
In a Reuters poll of 19 economists, the CPI was expected to rise by 2.7 percent from a year earlier.
Core CPI, a better measure of underlying price pressures, rose an on-year 2.79 percent last month, compared to 2.73 percent in August. It excludes more volatile energy, vegetable and fruit prices.
Directorate official Tsao Chih-hung told reporters that October’s inflation rate should be a little lower than September’s, and that they still believed inflation had peaked in the second quarter.
Inflation will likely continue to abate as the year progresses, Tsao added.
The inflation rate had hit a near 14-year high of 3.59 percent in June.
Like its peers, Taiwan‘s central bank is keeping a wary eye on price rises as it considers monetary policy.
Last month the bank raised its benchmark policy rate for the third time this year, though only by a mild 12.5 basis points (bps) to 1.625 percent.
The central bank said it expected CPI would rise 2.95 percent in 2022, slightly revising up the outlook from 2.83 percent predicted in June.
But Taiwan‘s inflation has never been as bad as in the United States or Europe.
The central bank, whose governor said last month it will need to keep inflation forecasts for next year in mind when it comes to the direction of monetary policy, holds its next quarterly rate-setting meeting in mid-December.
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