اردو
  • Inflation Climbs to 16-Month High at 7% in February

    Pakistan’s inflation rose to 7% in February 2026, marking the highest level file photo Pakistan’s inflation rose to 7% in February 2026, marking the highest level

    Pakistan’s inflation rose to 7% in February 2026, marking the highest level since October 2024, as electricity price hikes and rising global uncertainty pushed consumer costs upward.

    According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased 6.98% year-on-year, compared to 5.8% in January and 1.5% in February last year.

    Electricity Tariffs Drive Surge

    The biggest impact came from higher electricity prices after subsidy cuts and revised tariff structures.

    Housing, water, electricity, gas & fuels index rose 9.65% annually

    Electricity prices alone increased 10.03% month-on-month

    These adjustments significantly burdened households already coping with high living costs.

    Core Inflation & Interest Rates

    Core inflation showed slight easing:

    Urban core inflation: 7.1% (down from 7.2%)

    Rural core inflation: Stable at 8.3%

    The rise in CPI reduced real interest rates by around 120 basis points. The State Bank of Pakistan kept its policy rate unchanged at 10.5% last month.

    Food Prices Mixed

    Food inflation rose to 5.8%, up from 3.9% in January.

    Major increases:

    Tomatoes: +82%

    Wheat: +42.6%

    Wheat flour: +25.9%

    Meat: +11.3%

    Milk powder: +9.4%

    Price declines:

    Potatoes: -40%

    Chicken: -21.8%

    Gram pulse: -21.7%

    Onions: -17%

    Wholesale Pressure Rising

    The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) increased to 1.0%, signaling growing producer-level cost pressures that could pass on to consumers in coming months.

    External Risks Loom

    Analysts warn that escalating Middle East tensions could:

    Raise global oil prices

    Increase Pakistan’s import bill

    Pressure the rupee

    Worsen inflation further

    With millions of Pakistanis working in Gulf countries, any prolonged instability could also affect remittances — a key pillar of the economy.