Wednesday 13th October 2010 |
Text too small? |
Rising prices of green-leaf vegetables helped lift food prices higher last month as wild weather hit some crop-producing regions.
The Food Price Index rose 0.7% in September after a 0.1% decline a month earlier, Statistics New Zealand data. That was led by 2.6% increase in fruit and vegetable prices, with the cost of broccoli surging almost 50% and lettuce prices rising 14%. Fruit and vegetable prices have climbed 6.8% in the year ended Sept. 30, the first such annual gain since July last year.
"Some areas of the country experienced unusual weather conditions in September this year, including high winds, flooding and snow, which influenced the price of some vegetable items," the department said in its report.
Food prices have been falling over the past year with retailers forced to cut their margins as New Zealand's economic recovery slowed down, with households focusing on repaying debt rather than ramping up spending. Food prices rose 1.3% on an annual basis, the first such increase in four months.
Grocery food rose 1.2% last month after a 0.6% increase in August, with lower levels of discounting for snack foods, chocolate and yoghurt. Meat, poultry and fish prices fell 1%, led by a 7.6% decline in the cost of chicken and a 6.3% fall in lamb prices.
Restaurant and takeaway food prices fell 0.1% last month, while non-alcoholic beverage prices rose 0.7%.
The data is the month before the government hiked consumption tax on goods and services, and data showing spending on electronic cards indicated there was a small spike in spending before the increase in prices.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
Skellerup achieves another record result
August 21st Morning Report
Me Today signals capital raise and provides trading update
Seeka Announces Interim Result and Updates Guidance
FBU - Fletcher Building announces FY25 Results
August 20th Morning Report
RUA - New Zealand grown products support Rua's global strategy
Devon Funds Morning Note - 19 August 2025
Seeka Announces 15 cent Dividend
MCY - Major renewable build advanced despite 10% earnings dip