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Eurozone inflation rebounds to 2.0% on higher energy prices

Prices are rising in Europe

Via AP news wire
Tuesday 01 June 2021 11:18 BST
EU Europe Economy
EU Europe Economy (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

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Eurozone inflation rose to 2.0% in May, driven higher by rising oil prices as other inflationary pressures appeared to remain subdued.

The modest price rise in Europe compares with a much stronger jump in the US that has led to discussion about the inflationary impact of stimulus and relief policies from government spending and central banks.

The May figure for the 19 countries that use the euro currency compares with 1.6% in April, the European Union statistics agency Eurostat said in a news release Tuesday. The increase was largely driven by volatile energy prices; without those, core inflation was only 0.9%

Economists say the rise is driven by transitory factors such as the higher oil prices and the end of pandemic relief tax breaks — and therefore isn't likely to push the European Central Bank to withdraw its stimulus policies. ECB officials have indicated that the bank's policymakers will look through increases that don't reflect underlying inflation pressures building in the economy. Short-term factors include supply bottlenecks and the withdrawal of pandemic tax relief measures.

Rory Fennessy, assistant economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in an email that “overall, we expect inflation this year to be largely driven by transitory factors, and although core price pressures will pick up, these will continue to remain largely subdued.”

U.S. prices rose 4.2% in April from a year ago as the U.S. economy experienced a robust rebound with 40% of the population fully vaccinated against COVID-19, allowing more business activity to resume and travel to pick up. Europe's vaccine rollouts have lagged the U.S. pace. In Germany, 18% of the population has been fully vaccinated.

Unemployment figures out separately Tuesday showed the jobless rate fell to 8.0% in April from 8.1% in March. The April figure compares with 7.3% a year ago. Furlough support programs have kept many companies from laying people off and prevented a larger rise in the jobless rate.

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