Rate at 5.1 percent: Eurozone inflation rises to record high

Rate at 5.1 percent
Eurozone inflation hits record high

Fueled by high energy prices, eurozone inflation hit a new record high in January. Services and goods cost an average of 5.1 percent more in January than a year earlier. This is the highest value since the introduction of the euro in 1999.

The inflation rate in the euro area rose to a new high at the beginning of the year. Consumer prices in January were 5.1 percent higher than in the same month last year, according to an initial estimate from the Eurostat statistics office in Luxembourg. This is the highest value since the euro was introduced in 1999. In December the rate was 5.0 percent.

On the other hand, economists had expected a noticeable decline to 4.4 percent at the beginning of the year. Compared to the previous month, consumer prices rose by 0.3 percent. A decline of 0.4 percent had been forecast here. Inflation was once again driven by an extremely sharp increase in energy prices, which rose by 28.6 percent compared to the same month last year. Food and beverages were 3.6 percent more expensive than a year ago.

Excluding energy, food and luxury goods, the price level rose by 2.3 percent in January. In this definition, inflation was declining, in December the so-called core rate was still 2.6 percent. However, the increase at the beginning of the year was stronger than analysts had expected. Core inflation is considered by many economists to be a reliable measure of the inflation trend.

The medium-term inflation target of the European Central Bank (ECB) of two percent is currently being exceeded even more than before. However, a rate hike is not yet in sight. The ECB sees inflation as being driven primarily by special factors and expects the inflation rate to fall over the course of the year. On the financial markets, however, there is speculation that the key interest rate will increase this year.

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