Information from the Ghana measurable assistance has uncovered that the year-on-year Inflation rate for the period of September 2021 has leaped to 10.6 percent from the 9.7 percent recorded in August.
As per the Ghana Statistical Service, the figure recorded as expansion for September is the most elevated since post-COVID-19 which traces all the way back to August 2020.
Tending to Journalists, Government Statistician, Prof. Samuel Kobina Annim added that food expansion in the period of September remained at 11.5 which addresses a 0.6 rate expansion in food swelling contrasted with that of August 2021.
"The public year-on-year swelling rate was 10.6% in September 2021, which is 0.9 rate focuses higher than the 9.7% recorded in August 2021. Month-on-month expansion among August and September 2021 was 0.6% which is 0.3 rate focuses higher than whatever was recorded in August 2021," he said.
This month, the Food swelling which remained at 11.5% was higher than last month's 10.9% and simply over the normal of the past a year.
Nonetheless, Food expansion commitment to add up to swelling dropped from 50.2% last month to 48.6% in September. Generally speaking month-on-month food swelling was 0.0%, which is lower than the twelfth month public normal month-on-month expansion.
Vegetables, espresso and espresso substitutes, and oat items were the main subclass that recorded a negative month-on-month expansion.
All the twelve non-Food Division recorded positive month-on-month swelling of max 2.9%.
In the mean time, Non-Food year-on-year swelling on normal went up this month contrasted with last month (from 8.7% to 9.9%). Out of the 13 Division, six had higher year-on-year swelling in September 2021 than the turning normal throughout the most recent a year.