Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Annual producer inflation accelerates to 2.3% in March

Date:

South Africa’s Producer Inflation Accelerates in March 2025

According to the latest release from Statistics South Africa (Stats SA), annual producer price inflation rose to 2.3 % in March 2025, up from 1.8 % the previous month. The increase was driven primarily by higher prices for food, beverages and tobacco, as well as the furniture sector.

Key Drivers of the March PPI Rise

  • Monthly change: The producer price index (PPI) climbed 1.1 % month‑on‑month, the largest contributors being coke, petroleum, chemical, rubber and plastic products, together with food, beverages and tobacco.
  • Annual expectations: Economists had forecast an annual increase ranging from 1.7 % to 2.0 %, making the actual figure slightly above the consensus.
  • Geopolitical impact: Ongoing tensions in the Middle East have pushed fuel prices higher, which in turn raises production costs across many industries.

Sector‑by‑Sector Breakdown

Stats SA surveys a representative sample of producers each month to compile indices for final goods, intermediate products, electricity and water, mining, and agriculture, forestry and fishing.

  • Intermediate goods: Annual inflation for this category jumped from 7.8 % in February to 9.1 % in March. The rise was led by base metals, manufactured metals, sawmills and lumber.
  • Electricity and water: Year‑on‑year PPI increased to 17.9 % (up from 15.4 % in February).
  • Mining: The mining PPI surged to 33 %, compared with 30.3 % the prior month.
  • Food basket: Inflation for meat and meat products eased to 8.3 % year‑on‑year, down from 11.2 %. Agbiz notes that base effects in meat pricing and cattle slaughter trends are helping to temper this segment.

Implications for Farmers and Manufacturers

Agricultural organisations AgriSA and Agbiz highlight that fuel typically represents 12 %–18 % of total production costs in most farming systems. With fuel prices climbing due to the Middle East conflict, farmers face higher input expenses.

Fertiliser costs, which can account for 35 %–50 % of production expenses, have also risen sharply because of global supply disruptions and geopolitical risks. Together, these factors are likely to squeeze margins for both primary producers and downstream manufacturers.

Outlook and Risks

Looking ahead, analysts warn that sustained fuel volatility could keep producer inflation elevated through the second quarter of 2025. Potential mitigating factors include:

  • Improved global supply chains for fertilisers and chemicals.
  • Possible policy interventions aimed at stabilising domestic fuel prices.
  • Base‑effect relief in certain food categories, as seen with meat products.

Stakeholders are advised to monitor the monthly Stats SA releases, as well as updates from AgriSA and Agbiz, to gauge how evolving input costs will affect pricing strategies and profitability.

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