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Economy & MarketsThursday, July 2, 2026

Fuel and transport costs drive inflation higher in Ghana and Indonesia as Latin America cools

Ghana’s annual rate jumped to 5.3% and Indonesia’s hit 3.34%, while São Paulo and Buenos Aires saw price pressures ease, highlighting a global divergence in June inflation data.

Ghana’s year-on-year inflation rate rose sharply to 5.3% in June from 3.7% in May, reversing months of moderation, according to data released by the Ghana Statistical Service. The increase was propelled by non-food items, which accounted for 68.5% of the headline figure, with transport fares alone contributing 10.5 percentage points, followed by rents at 8.4% and secondary school fees at 7.2%. Food inflation edged up to 3.9%, but the basket concealed extreme divergences: ginger prices more than doubled over the year, surging 102.5%, while the cost of kontomire (alefu) fell 38% and maize dropped 32.1%. Services inflation remained elevated at 9.4%, even as the month-on-month pace of price increases slowed to 0.2% from 1.1% in May.

Indonesia’s annual inflation climbed to 3.34% in June, up from 3.08% the previous month, driven primarily by a 10 June adjustment to non-subsidised fuel prices that lifted Pertamax from Rp12,300 to Rp16,250 per litre. Bank Indonesia assessed the rate as still within its 2.5±1% target range and attributed the pressure to the transport group, with administered prices rising 1.41% month-on-month on the back of higher petrol and airfares linked to global energy costs. In the Yogyakarta special region, the fuel hike alone contributed 0.24 percentage points to a monthly inflation rate of 0.37%, while core inflation nationally held steady at 0.23% month-on-month. Volatile food inflation eased to 0.14% as declines in chicken and chilli prices offset increases for shallots and garlic.

In Latin America, the picture was one of disinflation. São Paulo’s IPC-Fipe index rose just 0.18% in June, decelerating from 0.45% in May, with the 12-month rate at 3.92%. Food inflation in the city slowed sharply to 0.13% from 1.14%, while housing costs also moderated. In Argentina, private consultants project the June consumer price index at around 1.8%, down from 2.1% in May, which would mark a third consecutive month of deceleration. The central bank’s market expectations survey, however, points to a 2.1% print, and analysts in Buenos Aires caution that winter holiday-related demand could introduce seasonal pressures in July.

The divergence leaves households in West Africa and Southeast Asia contending with cost-of-living strains concentrated in transport, housing and education, while consumers in parts of South America experience relief in food and goods prices. Ghana’s regional disparities were stark: the North East region recorded 10.2% inflation, while Bono East posted a 4.4% decline in average prices. Bank Indonesia expressed confidence that inflation will remain within target through 2027, citing coordination with regional inflation-control teams. The next concrete data point comes on 14 July, when Argentina’s INDEC publishes the official June figure, offering a test of whether the disinflation trend has persisted below the 2% threshold.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

0%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressSoutheast Asian press
Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
AlarmPragmatism

Ghana's headline inflation rose to 5.3% in June, but the real story lies in the wild swings of individual food prices. Ginger costs more than doubled over the year, while staples like maize and beans fell sharply, revealing how energy-driven transport costs and local supply shocks are tearing an uneven path through the economy. This divergence mirrors the broader gap opening between emerging nations as energy prices reshape inflation landscapes.

Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Indonesia's annual inflation climbed to 3.34% in June, nudged up by non-subsidized fuel and airfare increases. Bank Indonesia was quick to reassure that the rate remains within the target band and that price pressures are under control. The message is one of calm management, contrasting with the more dramatic energy-driven spikes seen in other emerging economies.

Broaden your view

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Upd. 03:48 PM2 languages · 5 outlets
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5 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Thursday, July 2, 2026

Fuel and transport costs drive inflation higher in Ghana and Indonesia as Latin America cools

Ghana’s annual rate jumped to 5.3% and Indonesia’s hit 3.34%, while São Paulo and Buenos Aires saw price pressures ease, highlighting a global divergence in June inflation data.

Ghana’s year-on-year inflation rate rose sharply to 5.3% in June from 3.7% in May, reversing months of moderation, according to data released by the Ghana Statistical Service. The increase was propelled by non-food items, which accounted for 68.5% of the headline figure, with transport fares alone contributing 10.5 percentage points, followed by rents at 8.4% and secondary school fees at 7.2%. Food inflation edged up to 3.9%, but the basket concealed extreme divergences: ginger prices more than doubled over the year, surging 102.5%, while the cost of kontomire (alefu) fell 38% and maize dropped 32.1%. Services inflation remained elevated at 9.4%, even as the month-on-month pace of price increases slowed to 0.2% from 1.1% in May.

Indonesia’s annual inflation climbed to 3.34% in June, up from 3.08% the previous month, driven primarily by a 10 June adjustment to non-subsidised fuel prices that lifted Pertamax from Rp12,300 to Rp16,250 per litre. Bank Indonesia assessed the rate as still within its 2.5±1% target range and attributed the pressure to the transport group, with administered prices rising 1.41% month-on-month on the back of higher petrol and airfares linked to global energy costs. In the Yogyakarta special region, the fuel hike alone contributed 0.24 percentage points to a monthly inflation rate of 0.37%, while core inflation nationally held steady at 0.23% month-on-month. Volatile food inflation eased to 0.14% as declines in chicken and chilli prices offset increases for shallots and garlic.

In Latin America, the picture was one of disinflation. São Paulo’s IPC-Fipe index rose just 0.18% in June, decelerating from 0.45% in May, with the 12-month rate at 3.92%. Food inflation in the city slowed sharply to 0.13% from 1.14%, while housing costs also moderated. In Argentina, private consultants project the June consumer price index at around 1.8%, down from 2.1% in May, which would mark a third consecutive month of deceleration. The central bank’s market expectations survey, however, points to a 2.1% print, and analysts in Buenos Aires caution that winter holiday-related demand could introduce seasonal pressures in July.

The divergence leaves households in West Africa and Southeast Asia contending with cost-of-living strains concentrated in transport, housing and education, while consumers in parts of South America experience relief in food and goods prices. Ghana’s regional disparities were stark: the North East region recorded 10.2% inflation, while Bono East posted a 4.4% decline in average prices. Bank Indonesia expressed confidence that inflation will remain within target through 2027, citing coordination with regional inflation-control teams. The next concrete data point comes on 14 July, when Argentina’s INDEC publishes the official June figure, offering a test of whether the disinflation trend has persisted below the 2% threshold.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 5 outlets · 2 languages

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How sources tell the same facts differently.

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How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressSoutheast Asian press
Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
AlarmPragmatism

Ghana's headline inflation rose to 5.3% in June, but the real story lies in the wild swings of individual food prices. Ginger costs more than doubled over the year, while staples like maize and beans fell sharply, revealing how energy-driven transport costs and local supply shocks are tearing an uneven path through the economy. This divergence mirrors the broader gap opening between emerging nations as energy prices reshape inflation landscapes.

Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Indonesia's annual inflation climbed to 3.34% in June, nudged up by non-subsidized fuel and airfare increases. Bank Indonesia was quick to reassure that the rate remains within the target band and that price pressures are under control. The message is one of calm management, contrasting with the more dramatic energy-driven spikes seen in other emerging economies.

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5 outlets · 2 languages

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