Statistics Department: Malaysia’s inflation up 1.8% in February 2024


KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s inflation increased by 1.8% in February 2024, with the index points recorded at 132.1 against 129.8 a year earlier, according to the Statistics Department.

Chief statistician Datuk Seri Mohd Uzir Mahidin said the increase in inflation was driven by housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels (2.7%), recreation, sport and culture (1.6%) as well as transport (1.2%).

“The other main groups recorded a slower increase were restaurant and accommodation services (2.9%), health (2.2%), food and beverages or F&B (1.9%) as well as education (1.5%),” he said in a statement.

The F&B group, which contributes 29.8% of the total consumer price index weightage, recorded a slower increase of 1.9% in February 2024 compared to 2% in January 2024, he added.

Mohd Uzir said the monthly inflation continued to show an increase of 0.5% (January 2024: 0.2%) with housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels; restaurant and accommodation services; and transport posting increases of 1.3%, 0.6% and 0.4%, respectively.

Core inflation increased at the same rate as January 2024 at 1.8% due to increases in F&B, restaurant and accommodation services, which recorded expansion of 3.1% and 2.9%, respectively, in February.

Malaysia’s 1.8% inflation rate was lower than Vietnam (4%), the Philippines (3.4%), the United States (3.2%), South Korea (3.1%) and Indonesia (2.8%). — Bernama

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

CPI , inflation , DoSM , consumer

   

Next In Business News

Oil settles higher on Mideast supply concerns
Powering on data centres
Japan frets over relentless yen slide as BoJ keeps ultra-low rates
Making scents of success
Medical insurance premiums on the rise
Singapore’s growth trajectory remains intact and on track for faster growth in 2024
Blackstone, KKR mortgage REITs stung by office debt challenges
Are there too many GPs and is the healthcare system overwhelmed?
Rising data centre ability
Kelington to reap the benefits of a diversified business strategy

Others Also Read