Colombian inflation accelerated less than expected in bittersweet news for policymakers as core price increases continued to gain pace.
(Bloomberg) — Colombian inflation accelerated less than expected in bittersweet news for policymakers as core price increases continued to gain pace.
The consumer price index rose 13.28% in February from a year earlier, the fastest increase since 1999, the statistics agency said Saturday. The result was below the 13.36% median forecasts of 18 economists in a Bloomberg survey. Prices rose 1.66% from the month earlier.
Food prices, restaurants and hotels, household items, and transportation led to the increase. Core prices — an indicator that excludes the most volatile products of the consumer’s basket and that is more affected by monetary policy decisions — rose 10.86% from a year earlier from 10.43% in January.
Colombia is the only major economy in Latin America where price rises have yet to peak. Since 2021, the central bank has raised its benchmark interest rate by 11 percentage points to 12.75%.
Central bank Governor Leonardo Villar said in an interview last month that Latin America’s major economies are likely to keep monetary policy tight “for a significant amount of time” after overshooting their inflation targets for years in a row. The bank’s board holds its next monetary policy meeting on March 31.
What Bloomberg Economics Says
“External supply shocks on tradable goods and regulated tariffs have started to moderate, but price indexation, accumulated currency depreciation and waning subsidies are limiting the relief on inflation. Increasing costs and price indexation are also putting upward pressure on services tariffs”
— Felipe Hernandez, Latin American economist
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Before Saturday’s data release, economists surveyed by the central bank forecast the key rate would peak at 13.25% by April and would be trimmed to 11% by December.
In an attempt to tame inflation, President Gustavo Petro sought to take control of the regulatory commissions that set prices for utility bills such as electricity. However, a high court overruled that decision this week.
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