JUBA - South Sudan's
annual inflation rate surged to 57.1 percent in August, propelled by a
surge in the cost of food, the new African nation said.
South Sudan became independent on July 9 under a 2005 peace
agreement with its former civil war foe Khartoum but has been struggling
to build up state institutions and contain tribal and rebel violence
killing 3,000 people this year.
A butcher in a local market in Accra. © EnterpriseAfrik
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Month-on-month inflation accelerated by 9 percent in August,
driven by higher cost for fish, sugar, cooking oil and some fresh meat
products, the national statistics bureau said in a statement obtained on
Monday.
On an annual level, inflation hit 57.1 percent in August due to a
jump in the rise in cost of food and non-alcoholic beverage -- the
biggest component in the consumer price index -- by 63.9 percent
Last week, the United Nations warned Sudan would face food
shortages from next year as agricultural production was hit by violence
and heavy rains.
Information Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said prices would
ease by December as supplies would improve after Juba signed a border
agreement with Khartoum to open ten border crossings earlier this month.
Borders between north and south were closed before Juba's independence.
"We used to get most of our finished goods from the north so when
they closed the borders (in May), they caused a shortage in the market.
There were few goods so the prices went up," Benjamin said.
"(There) was the rampant marketing in black market hard currency
in the beginning - our currency was not pegged at the proper rate. Our
central bank has properly fixed it," Benjamin said.
Trade would also increase with east African neighbours Uganda, Kenya and Ethiopia, he said.
Source: Reuters
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