Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08MASERU168
2008-06-06 12:51:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Maseru
Cable title:  

LESOTHO: WORRYING DOUBLE-DIGIT INFLATION DEVELOPMENTS

Tags:  ECON EFIN AFIN AMGT LT 
pdf how-to read a cable
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OO RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHJO RUEHRN
DE RUEHMR #0168 1581251
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O R 061251Z JUN 08
FM AMEMBASSY MASERU
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3715
INFO RUCNSAD/SADC COLLECTIVE
RUEHMR/AMEMBASSY MASERU 4134
UNCLAS MASERU 000168 

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR AF/EX, HR/OE, AF/S, AF/EPS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON EFIN AFIN AMGT LT
SUBJECT: LESOTHO: WORRYING DOUBLE-DIGIT INFLATION DEVELOPMENTS

UNCLAS MASERU 000168

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR AF/EX, HR/OE, AF/S, AF/EPS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON EFIN AFIN AMGT LT
SUBJECT: LESOTHO: WORRYING DOUBLE-DIGIT INFLATION DEVELOPMENTS


1. SUMMARY: Inflation in Lesotho continues to erode economic
gains and the purchasing power of salaried employees. The
year-on-year increase in the consumer price index reached 10.7%
in March 2008, as reported by the nation's Central Bank as well
as the Bureau of Statistics, sources which typically
underestimate negative fiscal developments. According to these
sources, annualized month-to-month inflation reached 19.4% in
March. As confirmed by local private bank publications,
year-on-year inflation rates have hovered over the 10% mark
every month since mid-2007. The rising cost of imports such as
food and fuel drive Lesotho's inflation, but factors unique to
landlocked Lesotho -- including the drag on productivity of
HIV/AIDS, total dependency on ground-transported imports from
South Africa, and skyrocketing interest rates -- are compounding
the inflationary situation. The pinch is eroding the
competitiveness of U.S. Mission local wages in the Mountain
Kingdom. END SUMMARY.

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Troubling Double-Digit Inflation Numbers
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2. Lesotho continues to publish troubling inflation statistics.
The nation's Central Bank and the Bureau of Statistics, primary
data sources which typically underestimate negative fiscal
developments, recently released data detailing a year-on-year
increase in the consumer price index from 10.4% in January 2008
to 10.6% in February and 10.7% in March. This data was
supported by international financial institutions, including
South Africa-based Standard Bank, which issued a "Market
Commentary" publication that reported double digit inflation hit
Lesotho in 2007 and the inflation rate is still increasing.


3. On May 27, Lesotho's Monetary Policy Committee concluded
that increasing food and fuel prices, in addition to factors
unique to Lesotho's economy, continue to drive domestic
inflation. Annualized inflation in food prices hit 57.2% in
April, while annualized fuel prices and taxi fares increased by
44.8% and 34.4% respectively. Lesotho's 2006 inflation rate of
4.8% nearly doubled in 2007 to an annual inflation rate of 8.3%
(topping double figures by year's end),leading to a first
quarter 2008 rate of 10.3%. During March 2008, Lesotho's
annualized month-to-month interest rates reached 19.4%.

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South Africa's Problems Magnified
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4. As Lesotho is completely surrounded by South Africa and
dependent on its imports, South Africa's inflation rate (which
reached 10.4% in March) is instantly transferred, and
compounded, into Lesotho. Lesotho is so dependent on imports
delivered overland that disproportional rises in fuel and food
prices compound this "imported inflation." Also, the ravages of
HIV/AIDS effect inflation in Lesotho both by negatively
impacting productivity and increasing the burden on individuals
to provide for infirm and orphaned family members - which
decreases savings, and thus capital available in the economy for
investment-fueled growth. These factors have created an
economic system in Lesotho which magnifies the economic ills of
its larger neighbor, South Africa, including inflation.

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Inflation Eroding Local Compensation
--------------


5. COMMENT: Hyperinflation has hit Lesotho. Local staff have
seen the value of their wages decline precipitously as
competitor organizations, including a growing number of
international NGOs responding to the HIV/AIDS crisis and
entities implementing Lesotho's Millennium Challenge Account
Compact, have increased wages by up to 30% to compensate for
these conditions. The Government of Lesotho, the country's
largest employer, implemented 15-30% wage increases for all
civil servants this current fiscal year. As the root causes of
this inflation will continue for the foreseeable future, the
inflation rate is likely to rise further in the near term.

MURPHY