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SEOUL - South Korea's consumer prices hit a 27-month high in February mainly due to higher food and oil-related costs, a government report showed Wednesday.
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The February reading breached the central bank's 4 percent ceiling for the second consecutive month and stayed much higher than the government's inflation target of 3 percent.
It posted the highest level since 4.5 percent in November 2008.
Core CPI, which excludes oil and agricultural products, rose 3. 1 percent in February from a year earlier, the highest since 3.1 percent in August 2009, according to the report.
The core consumer prices increased 2.6 percent on-year in January. The inflation reading comes amid the South Korean government's efforts to ease inflationary pressures by decreasing import taxes on some items, unloading stockpiles of agricultural products and cracking down on price-rigging in the corporate sector.
Surging prices in oil and agricultural products led the latest consumer inflation amid concerns over the rising oil prices stemming from the political turmoil in the Middle East.
Prices for agricultural, dairy and fisheries goods climbed 17.7 percent in February from a year before, the report showed. Oil products jumped 12.8 percent last month on a on-year basis, adding cost burdens for factories to produce goods.
The fresh food price index, a gauge of vegetables and fruits, soared 25.5 percent in February from a year earlier, keeping its two-digit uptrend for the ninth consecutive month.
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