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Rapid Rise of Service Prices Drives Accelerating Armenian Inflation

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  • Rapid Rise of Service Prices Drives Accelerating Armenian Inflation

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    May 1 2009



    Rapid Rise of Service Prices Drives Accelerating Armenian Inflation in
    April

    by Venla Sipila


    Service and consumer prices in Armenia increased by 3.2%
    month-on-month (m/m) in April, in a significant acceleration compared
    with the inflation rate of 1.4% m/m seen in March. Different price
    categories displayed very varied developments. Specifically, food
    prices increased by 2.1% m/m and non-food good prices gained 2.8%
    m/m. Meanwhile, reaching 5.6% m/m, the growth of service tariffs
    clearly exceeded headline inflation. Annual inflation also accelerated
    significantly in April, reaching 3.1% after standing at just 1.0%
    year-on-year (y/y) in March. Service prices posted by far the most
    rapid gain also in annual comparison; their surge of 11.7% y/y,
    comparing to growth of 2.8% y/y in non-food prices, and an annual fall
    of 1.6% in food prices. April data brought the cumulative gain in
    Armenian consumer prices since the beginning of the year to 3.9%,
    while annual inflation for the January-April period came in at 2.3%.

    Significance:April inflation developments continue the renewed
    intensification in Armenian price pressures. The acceleration seen in
    March inflation had mainly been the result of the devaluation of the
    dram exchange rate seen earlier in the month, while the April jump in
    inflation is mainly attributed to the increase in import prices of
    Russian gas. The Russian gas giant Gazprom increased the price of gas
    sold to Armenia from $110US/1,000 cubic metres (cm) last year to
    $154US/1,000 cm from the beginning of April, and this is reflected in
    the rapid acceleration in service tariff growth. While this increase
    is lower than initially sought by Gazprom, a previous agreement sees
    Armenian gas prices rising to $200US/1,000 cm next year and up to
    European market prices in 2011. Service price growth will push
    Armenian inflation up in annual terms in the coming months, but the
    overall sharp cooling in economic activity will have the opposite
    effect. Average monthly inflation still remains clearly below its
    year-ago level, and given downward economic momentum, the Central Bank
    of Armenia (CBA) may consider further interest rate cuts in the coming
    months (see Armenia: 9 April 2009: ). Then again, the potential of
    even sharp renewed upward price pressures certainly exist, given the
    vulnerability of the dram exchange rate amid Armenia's high external
    financing requirement.
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