- The All-Jamaica Consumer Price Index (CPI) for November 2025 increased by 2.4%, according to data released by the Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN). The release marks the first CPI data to reflect the impact of Hurricane Melissa, which made landfall on October 28, 2025. Furthermore, this is the largest monthly movement in the All-Jamaica CPI since September 2013 (which rose by 2.8%), matching the 2.4% monthly increase recorded in August 2024 following Hurricane Beryl.
- The main contributor to the increase in the CPI for November 2025 was the ‘Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages’ division, which rose by 6.0%. The rise in the index for the ‘Food’ group was mainly attributed to a 19.1% increase in the ‘Vegetables, tubers, plantains, cooking bananas and pulses’ class, due to higher prices for most produce, including tomatoes, pumpkins, sweet peppers, hot peppers, and cucumbers.
- There was also an 8.8% increase in the index for the ‘Fruit and Nuts’ class due to higher prices for fruits such as papayas, watermelons and ackees. Additionally, ‘Ready-made food and other food products’ increased by 16.4%, mainly due to a rise in escallion prices. Increases were observed in all other classes in the group.
- That said, the index for the ‘Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas and Other Fuels’ declined by 1.3%, largely influenced by lower electricity rates. The index for the ‘Transport’ division remained unchanged compared to the previous month.
- Owing to the significant increase in consumer prices for November, the Point to Point (P2P) inflation rate amounted to 4.4%. This was 1.5 percentage points higher than the 2.9% recorded for October 2024 to October 2025. It also marks the highest P2P since May 2025 (which was 5.2%).
- The sharp rise in inflation increases the expectation for the Bank of Jamaica (BOJ) to hold rates at its next policy meeting on December 18, 2025. It held its policy rate at 5.75% at its first meeting post-Hurricane Melissa to contain inflation, support the domestic currency and ensure the affordability of imports during storm-recovery efforts. Still, headline inflation is anticipated to rise sharply above the 4%–6% target in the near term.
- Nonetheless, the BOJ emphasised that macroeconomic stability remains its primary concern, reaffirming its commitment to contain post-Melissa inflationary pressures to protect vulnerable populations and support the economic recovery. Consequently, the Central Bank could likely hold rates for much of 2026, though analysts see room for a 25 basis points (bps) cut in the fourth quarter of 2026 (Q4 2026) to support domestic demand, lowering the rate from 5.75% to 5.50%.
(Sources: STATIN, BOJ, and BMI, A Fitch Solutions Company)
