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Eurozone inflation is slowing, but underlying price pressures persist

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While the European economy is more resilient than many forecasters predicted, it has continued to weaken significantly over the past 12 months, with inflation-adjusted wages and consumer confidence falling. Growth is expected to pick up, but further interest rate rises could put a brake on the economy.

Gita Gopinath, first deputy director of the International Monetary Fund, said this week that an “inconvenient truth” is that central banks must remain diligent in reducing inflation “even if it means risking weaker growth”.

The same message comes from the ECB, which has already signaled the likelihood of rate hikes in July and September. Speaking this week at the central bank’s 10th annual conference in Sintra, Portugal, Christine Lagarde, the president of the ECB, said: “Inflation in the euro area is too high and will remain so for too long.”

The rapid rate hikes have drawn criticism from political leaders such as Giorgia Meloni, Italy’s prime minister, who expressed contempt for “the ECB’s simplistic recipe for raising interest rates”. in a speech to parliament on Wednesday.

Eurozone inflation — pushed up last year by high energy and food prices after the coronavirus pandemic eased and Russia invaded Ukraine — peaked at 10.6 percent in October.

Since then, price increases across the eurozone have slowed. Annual inflation in France fell from 6 percent in May to 5.3 percent in June. Italy’s rate fell to a 14-month low of 6.7 percent, down from 8 percent the month before. Spain’s exchange rate fell to 1.6 percentthe slowest since March 2021. Government subsidies on the gas bill have helped keep the rate low.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, saw annual inflation rise to 6.8 percent, up from 6.3 percent in May. But analysts said the increase was almost entirely due to a cut in subsidized train fares that the government enacted in June last year. Inflation in Germany is expected to decline again in September.

At 11.3 percent, Slovakia’s rate was the highest in the eurozone.

Despite the expectation that inflation in Europe will continue to fall, the rate remains well above the central bank’s target of 2 percent. Efforts to meet that goal led policymakers to raise interest rates, pushing the deposit rate to 3.5 percent in June, a 22-year high.

Before the ECB started raising interest rates last year, the key policy rate of the ECB was 0.5 percent negative.

Ms Lagarde said this week that “this persistence is caused by the fact that inflation gradually works its way through the economy as different economic actors try to pass the costs on to each other.”

While economists are often fixated on the risk of a wage-price spiral fueling inflation, there has recently been mounting evidence that the pursuit of corporate profits is driving up prices, despite significant declines in energy prices since last year’s peak.

Rising corporate profits are responsible for almost half of the increase in European inflation over the past two years, as companies have raised prices by more than just the cost of imported energy, say economists at That’s what the IMF said this week.

“European companies have so far been better protected than workers” against rising costs, the IMF noted. After adjusting for inflation, earnings were above pre-pandemic levels, while employee compensation was 2 percent below trend in the first quarter of this year.

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