What is inflation?

Content

Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises over time. When inflation is happening, each Solomon Islands dollar in your pocket buys a little less than it did before.

It is important to understand that inflation is not about the price of one single item going up. The price of betel nut might rise one week because of a poor harvest, then fall again the next. That is a normal price movement. Inflation describes the broad, sustained increase in prices across many of the things households buy: food, fuel, transport, rent, clothing, school fees and more.

The simplest way to think about inflation is this. If prices rise but your income stays the same, your money does not stretch as far. Economists call this a fall in purchasing power. Inflation is the measure of how quickly that is happening.

A simple example

Content

Imagine a basket of everyday goods costs SBD100 today. If inflation over the next year is 3 percent, that same basket will cost about SBD103 next year.

Your SBD100 has not changed, but what it can buy has shrunk. To purchase the exact same items, you now need a little more money. Spread across an entire economy and an entire year, small percentage changes like this add up and shape the cost of living for every household.

Inflation

Headline inflation and Core inflation

You may see two different inflation figures reported. They measure slightly different things, and both are useful.

Headline inflation is the change in the price of the full basket, including everything households buy.

Core inflation strips out the most volatile items, mainly fresh food and energy, whose prices can swing sharply from month to month due to weather, harvests or global fuel markets. By removing this noise, core inflation gives a clearer view of the underlying price trend in the economy.

Looking at both figures together helps the Central Bank tell the difference between a temporary price spike and a deeper, more lasting shift in prices.

What causes inflation?

Prices in Solomon Islands are shaped by two broad sets of forces.

Pressures from outside the country

Solomon Islands imports a large share of what it consumes, so prices here are heavily influenced by events overseas. This is known as imported inflation. When the global price of oil rises, the cost of fuel at Honiara pump stations follows, and that flows through to transport, shipping and the price of almost everything that has to be moved. The same applies to imported food and goods: if they cost more abroad, they cost more here.

The value of the Solomon Islands dollar against other major currencies also matters. If the dollar buys fewer units of foreign currency, imported goods become more expensive in local terms, which adds to inflation.

Pressures from inside the country

Local conditions matter just as much. Heavy rainfall or poor weather can disrupt the supply of fresh fruit, vegetables and other domestic produce, pushing prices up. Strong demand, the amount of money circulating in the financial system, local taxes, and the pricing decisions of producers and sellers all play a part.

In short, inflation can come from costs rising (cost-push inflation) or from demand outpacing supply (demand-pull inflation). In a small, open island economy like Solomon Islands, both global and local factors are usually at work at the same time.

Is inflation always bad?

Not entirely. A low and steady rate of inflation is normal and even helpful. It can encourage spending and investment, and it gives businesses the confidence to plan, hire and grow.

The problem is when inflation becomes too high or unpredictable. High inflation:

  • Erodes purchasing power. As prices climb, the same wage or income buys fewer goods, which hits lower income households hardest.
  • Reduces the value of savings. Money set aside loses real value over time if prices rise faster than the interest earned on it.
  • Makes planning difficult. Households and businesses struggle to budget and invest when they cannot predict what things will cost next year.
  • Forces hard choices. When prices rise sharply, families may have to give up some purchases in order to afford essentials like food.

The opposite problem, deflation, is also harmful. When prices fall persistently, people delay spending, businesses earn less, and economic activity can slow down. This is why the goal is not zero inflation, but low and stable inflation.

What does the Central Bank do about inflation?

Maintaining price stability is the primary objective of the Central Bank of Solomon Islands (CBSI), set out in the Central Bank of Solomon Islands Act 2012. In practice, this means keeping inflation low and stable, with an objective of holding inflation below 5 percent while avoiding deflation. CBSI's broader ambition is for Solomon Islands to remain among the lowest inflation and most financially stable economies in the South Pacific.

CBSI pursues this objective through monetary policy, the set of decisions that influence the cost and availability of money and credit in the economy. The Central Bank sets a policy rate that signals its stance to the financial system, and it uses a range of tools to manage the level of money and lending in the economy. It also monitors global developments closely, since so much of the inflation Solomon Islands experiences is imported through fuel and food prices.

Because the value of the Solomon Islands dollar influences import prices, managing the currency and maintaining adequate foreign reserves are an important part of safeguarding price stability.

The Central Bank cannot control every price. It has little influence over the global oil market or the weather that affects local harvests. What it can do is manage the conditions within the economy, respond to shocks, and work alongside the Government, whose fiscal decisions also affect prices, to keep inflation low, stable and predictable.

What this means for you

Understanding inflation helps you make better financial decisions. A few practical takeaways:

  • Watch the trend, not the headline of the week. A single price rise is not inflation. The sustained direction of prices over time is what matters.
  • Factor inflation into your savings. To grow your money in real terms, the return on your savings needs to keep pace with rising prices.
  • Plan for rising costs. When budgeting for the year ahead, allow for prices being modestly higher than they are today.

By keeping inflation low and stable, the Central Bank of Solomon Islands works to protect the value of your money and support a stronger, more resilient economy for all Solomon Islanders.