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News > Estonia

Eurozone Inflation Hits New Record of 9.1 Percent

  • Symbolic representation of price increases.

    Symbolic representation of price increases. | Photo: Twitter/ @johnwal97336150

Published 1 September 2022
Opinion

The gas supply crisis and droughts are adding to persisting supply-side pressures on inflation at the moment. Low demand is another factor.

Inflation in the Eurozone hit a new record of 9.1 percent in August as energy and food prices continued to drift higher, according to a flash estimate published on Wednesday by Eurostat. Inflation was at 8.9 percent in the 19-country single currency area in July.

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Eurostat estimates that the Baltic countries should be recording the highest inflation rates for August, with 25.2 percent for Estonia, 21.1 percent for Lithuania, and 20.8 percent for Latvia.

Energy price is still the primary driving force behind this growth, with an expected year-on-year inflation of 38.9 percent for August. Food, alcohol and tobacco prices continue to rise, with an expected yearly inflation of 10.6 percent. Year-on-year inflation for non-industrial goods should also rise from 4.5 percent last month to 5 percent in August.

"The main concern is the surprise increase in goods inflation. The increase from 4.5 percent to 5 percent was much larger than expected and fuels worries about second-round effects from the input cost shock lasting longer," said Bert Colijn, an ING's senior economist.

The price of services should also register a slight rise from 3.7 percent in July to 3.8 percent in August. Specific European problems continue to push inflation higher. The gas supply crisis and droughts are adding to persisting supply-side pressures on inflation at the moment. Low demand is another factor.

"The output gap is still negative, household consumption is well below pre-pandemic levels and retail sales have in fact been on a declining trend since November," said Colijn, adding that the eurozone is mainly facing an unprecedented squeeze in real incomes.

Elevated inflation adds pressure on the European Central Bank (ECB), which raised key interest rates by 50 basis points in July and is expected to increase rates again at its meeting in September. The ECB is planning for a return of its target two-percent inflation rate by using a "meeting-by-meeting approach to setting interest rates," said Philip R. Lane, an ECB executive board member, on Monday.

"Our overriding goal is to make sure that monetary policy will deliver the timely return of inflation to our medium-term two-percent target," said Lane.

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