A housewife (R) buys vegetables at a wet market in Singapore
Roslan Rahman | Afp | Getty Images
Singapore on Monday reported lower-than-expected inflation for April at 1.8% on the back of lower increase in services and retail inflation.
Reuters-polled economists had estimated inflation at 2%. Core inflation — which strips out prices of private transport and accommodation — came in at 1.4% compared with expectations of 1.7%.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore, however, said that the city-state’s imported cost pressures are expected to pick up and broaden in the months ahead.
“As higher energy and other input costs arising from the developments in the Middle East pass through global supply chains, they will raise production and transport costs for a wider range of Singapore’s imported goods and services,” according to the government statement.
The MAS had projected both headline and core inflation would come in at 1.5%-2.5% for the whole of 2026.
Earlier in the day, Singapore revised its first-quarter GDP growth sharply higher to 6%, up from 4.6% in advanced estimates, and topping Reuters estimates of 5.1%.
The country’s ministry of trade and industry said that Singapore’s full year growth will come in between 2%-4% in 2026, amid energy-related disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.
The MAS in April tightened its monetary policy for the first time in over three years due to the inflation outlook.
Unlike most nations, Singapore does not use interest rates to manage its monetary policy, but instead guides the Singapore dollar within a policy band against a trade-weighted basket of currencies.
Singapore dollar is managed within the set policy band, whose precise levels are not disclosed.
