Zambia’s inflation rate for the month
of October, 2011 has slightly reduced by 0.1 percent to 8.7 percent from
8.8 percent in September last month.
The decrease is attributed to
reductions in some food and non- food prices.
Central Statistical Office (CSO)
Acting Director John Kalumbi announced reduction at a press briefing held at
his office in Lusaka today. This was during the CSO monthly bulletin.
Mr. Kalumbi further disclosed that
Zambia recorded a trade surplus valued at K923.3 billion in September 2011
representing a nominal increase of 4.4 percent from K884.2 billion recorded in
August, this year.
He said Zambia exported more in
September than it imported in the same month in nominal terms.
He stated that the country’s major
export products in September were intermediate goods, raw materials, capital
goods and consumer goods.
He named Zambia’s major export
destinations as Switzerland, China, South Africa, Congo DR and the United
Kingdom which collectively accounted for 60.6 percent.
Mr. Kalumbi said Zambia’s major import
products were intermediate goods, capital goods and raw materials goods that
came from South Africa, Congo DR, China, India and the United Arab
Emirates collectively accounting for 15.3 percent in September.
And Mr. Kalumbi has said poverty
levels in Zambia were still very high despite recording some decline in 2006
and 2010.
Mr. Kalumbi said poverty had continued
to be more predominant in rural areas than urban areas where he said people
were wallowing in extreme poverty in Luapula, Western, Eastern and Northern
province.
He explained that the poverty gap is
rural areas especially in remote provinces, has continued to widen despite
recording some reduction.
Luapula is leading in poverty levels
which increased from 73.9 percent in 2006 to 80.5 percent in 2010 while Central
province recorded the highest reduction in poverty levels during the same
period from 70.7 percent in 2006 to 60.9 percent last year.
Lusaka province also recorded the
lowest poverty indictor of 0.3 percent from 24.7 to 24.4 percent.
The CSO Chief expressed happiness that
rural poverty declined from 80.3 percent in 2006 to 77.9 in 2010 while urban poverty
was less than 3.0 percent from 29.7 percent to 27.5 percent during the same
period under review.
ZANIS
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