South Africa's consumer inflation rate accelerated 0.8 percentage points to 7.0 percent in February, its highest in nearly seven years, official data showed Wednesday. The rise in the consumer price index (CPI) was the largest since May 2009 when the rate was 8.0 percent, according to data from StatsSA. A sharp fall in the rand currency and the worst drought in a century pushed food prices higher, taking the consumer price index up from January's annual rate of 6.2 percent.
The rise in the inflation rate has forced the central bank to increase interest rates twice in a row this year. Last week the central bank hiked its benchmark repurchase rate by 25 basis points to 7.0 percent after an aggressive 50 basis points in January. Nedbank, one of the country's leading lenders, stated that the central bank "will have an increasingly difficult task of balancing rising inflation and weak growth."
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