Consumer price index (2010 = 100) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Consumer price index reflects changes in the cost to the average consumer of acquiring a basket of goods and services that may be fixed or changed at specified intervals, such as yearly. The Laspeyres formula is generally used. Data are period averages.

Source: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics and data files.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Sudan 3,364.82 2020
2 Zimbabwe 2,725.31 2020
3 Malawi 454.43 2020
4 Angola 378.88 2019
5 Ghana 336.49 2021
6 Guinea 327.46 2021
7 Ethiopia 319.02 2019
8 Egypt 303.13 2020
9 Sierra Leone 297.19 2021
10 Nigeria 267.51 2019
11 Zambia 245.71 2020
12 Liberia 223.13 2018
13 Kenya 212.47 2021
14 Burundi 211.87 2021
15 The Gambia 196.46 2021
16 Tanzania 193.60 2020
17 Madagascar 192.06 2020
18 Mozambique 188.04 2020
19 São Tomé and Principe 185.09 2018
20 Uganda 180.47 2020
21 Lesotho 173.51 2021
22 Tunisia 173.44 2021
23 South Africa 171.60 2021
24 Namibia 167.30 2021
25 Eswatini 166.82 2019
26 Algeria 166.22 2021
27 Rwanda 165.30 2021
28 Botswana 163.63 2021
29 Central African Republic 155.28 2020
30 Seychelles 141.09 2020
31 Mauritius 138.64 2021
32 Mauritania 138.24 2020
33 Dem. Rep. Congo 133.85 2016
34 Equatorial Guinea 130.28 2020
35 Congo 127.01 2020
36 Libya 125.71 2013
37 Cameroon 124.30 2021
38 Gabon 124.07 2020
39 Chad 122.95 2020
40 Djibouti 122.39 2020
41 Côte d'Ivoire 118.99 2021
42 Niger 116.81 2021
43 Togo 115.38 2020
44 Burkina Faso 114.43 2021
45 Benin 114.07 2020
46 Mali 113.49 2021
47 Morocco 113.42 2021
48 Guinea-Bissau 112.72 2019
49 Senegal 112.03 2020
50 Cabo Verde 111.17 2020
51 Comoros 103.62 2013

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: A general and continuing increase in an economy’s price level is called inflation. The increase in the average prices of goods and services in the economy should be distinguished from a change in the relative prices of individual goods and services. Generally accompanying an overall increase in the price level is a change in the structure of relative prices, but it is only the average increase, not the relative price changes, that constitutes inflation. A commonly used measure of inflation is the consumer price index, which measures the prices of a representative basket of goods and services purchased by a typical household. The consumer price index is usually calculated on the basis of periodic surveys of consumer prices. Other price indices are derived implicitly from indexes of current and constant price series.

Limitations and Exceptions: Consumer price indexes should be interpreted with caution. The definition of a household, the basket of goods, and the geographic (urban or rural) and income group coverage of consumer price surveys can vary widely by country. In addition, weights are derived from household expenditure surveys, which, for budgetary reasons, tend to be conducted infrequently in developing countries, impairing comparability over time. Although useful for measuring consumer price inflation within a country, consumer price indexes are of less value in comparing countries.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Consumer price indexes are constructed explicitly, using surveys of the cost of a defined basket of consumer goods and services.

Base Period: 2010

Periodicity: Annual