Vietnam's CPI has increased by 1 percent in February and 1.42 percent against the same period last year, according to the General Statistics Office of Vietnam (GSO).
The CPI inched up 0.99 percent in urban areas and 1.02 percent in rural areas.
The increase is a result of rising global petrol prices and the after-effect of the Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday, which typically causes prices to rise due to a spike in demand.
Petrol prices went up further as a result of global oil price surge while prices of food, foodstuffs, dining out, and public transport were also on the rise, said Nguyen Thu Oanh from the GSO, adding that these are the main reasons behind a 1-percent month-on-month hike in February’s CPI.
In February, among the 11 commodity and service baskets, 10 reported increases, with the highest seen in transport. Meanwhile, prices of post and telecommunications declined by 0.04 percent.
Prices of food, foodstuffs and dining services edged up 1.54 percent, causing the overall CPI of the month to advance 0.52 percentage points. Among them, prices of foodstuffs rose the highest, by 1.69 percent, closely followed by the dining services, 1.68 percent.
Rice slightly picked up with 0.2 percent, largely because export prices remained high and major markets, such as the Philippines, Malaysia and China, boosted rice imports originating from Vietnam, according to Oanh.
The GSO pointed out that core inflation in February rose by 0.49 percent over the previous month, and by 0.68 percent over the same period last year.