The Consumer Price Index of “hotels and restaurants”, one of 12 groups of goods and services surveyed by the Statistical Center of Iran for calculating inflation, stood at 660.7 in the fifth month of the current Iranian year (July 23-Aug. 22), registering an 83.1% rise compared with the same month of last year.
The rise was the highest among the groups under review.
The group’s month-on-month and annualized inflation rates were at 3% and 67.9% respectively.
The 12 groups of the basket of consumer goods and services surveyed by the SCI include "food and beverages" with a coefficient of 26.64%, "tobacco" with 0.59%, "clothing and shoes" with 4.78%, "housing, water, electricity, natural gas and other fuels" with 35.5% (highest), "furniture, home appliances and their maintenance" with 3.93%, "health and treatment" with 7.14%, "transportation" with 9.41%, "communications" with 2.87%, "leisure and culture" with 1.65%, "education" with 1.86%, "hotels and restaurants" with 1.44% and "miscellaneous items and services" with 4.18%.
The general annualized inflation in Iran was reported at 41.5% by the Statistical Center of Iran in a new report released on Tuesday.
The overall goods and services Consumer Price Index (using the Iranian year to March 2017 as the base year) stood at 514.2 in the month ending Aug. 22, indicating a month-on-month rise of 2% and a year-on-year rise of 52.2%.
CPI hit 504.8 for urban households and 567.1 for rural households, indicating a month-on-month increase of 2% and 1.7%, respectively.
SCI put the annualized inflation for urban and rural areas at 40.9% and 44.4%, respectively.
The year-on-year inflation stood at 51.1% for urban areas and 58.4% for rural areas in the month.
The rise in prices of goods and services accelerated at an unprecedented pace after the government decided to overhaul the import subsidy system.
The government move saw the abolition of the controversial practice of allocating cheap dollars at the rate of 42,000 rials per dollar, locally known as the Preferential Foreign Currency, to import essential goods, including corn, soymeal, unprocessed oil, oilseeds and barley, in addition to wheat, flour and medicine.
The market value of the dollar is currently above 300,000 rials.
“Until now, we have been paying to producers [read importers] but now the subsidies go to consumers. In fact, the Preferential Foreign Currency has not been ceased, rather the allocation method has changed,” President Ebrahim Raisi said in a televised speech on the eve of the introduction of the move in May.
In his speech, Raisi emphasized that the removal of cheap dollar allocation will not lead to a price rise in wheat, flour and medicine. However, the move has led to a dramatic rise in the prices of essential goods. In fact, the prices of all commodities and services have also risen suddenly in a ripple effect.
Also known as necessity or basic goods, essential goods are products consumers will buy, regardless of changes in income levels.