Taiwan's CPI climbs 0.88 pct in January
Share - WeChat
TAIPEI - Taiwan's Consumer Price Index (CPI) grew by 0.88 percent year-on-year in January, the island's statistics agency said Tuesday.
The agency attributed the rise mainly to price increases in tobacco, fuel, medical services, vegetables, dairy and meat products.
Food prices in January rose 0.82 percent from a year earlier, with the prices of vegetables, dairy, grains and meat up 25.04 percent, 5.03 percent, 3.11 percent and 2.85 percent, respectively.
However, fruit dropped 27.43 percent compared with last January due to a relatively high comparison base.
The core CPI, which excludes vegetables, fruit and energy, saw a year-on-year rise of 0.82 percent, the agency said, while the Wholesale Price Index fell 0.74 percent from a year earlier.
Related Stories
- Mainland pledges new policies to facilitate development of Taiwan businesses
- Xiamen Airlines refunds passengers after cross-Straits flights obstructed
- Taiwan deputies to 13th NPC elected
- Taiwan's exports rise on recovering global economy
- Taiwanese graduates enjoy higher starting salaries as economy improves: survey
- Where brands debut: First in Shanghai kicks off
- Shanghai blazes a unique path in becoming a global hub for the launch of products
- Expert: China's solutions to global AI governance prioritize inclusiveness
- South China Sea sub-forum calls for greater restraint, dialogue, cooperation to safeguard regional peace
- Blue Circle model offers China's solution for ocean governance
- Testing begins on the Shandong section of Xiong'an-Shangqiu high-speed railway































