European Inflation Skyrockets to Record 7.5% — ECB Chief Lagarde Expects Energy Prices to ‘Stay Higher for Longer’
While inflation continues to roar in the U.S., the inflation rate in the eurozone tapped another high last month reaching 7.5% in March. Energy and food prices have soared throughout the 19 member state economies, and European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde expects energy prices to “stay higher for longer.”
Eurozone Inflation Continues to Climb, ECB Predicted to Raise Rates 3 Times This Year
The 19 countries sharing the euro are suffering from rising inflation according to figures stemming from March that shows the inflation rate rose to 7.5%. Similar to the U.S. Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank’s (ECB) inflation target is 2% and inflation in food prices, services, energy, and durable goods has risen well above the target.
Speaking to an audience in Cyprus on Wednesday, ECB president Christine Lagarde discussed the higher cost of living in Europe and stressed: “three main factors are likely to take inflation higher.” During her speech in Cyprus, Lagarde insisted:
Energy prices are expected to stay higher for longer. Global manufacturing bottlenecks are likely to persist in certain sectors, [and] households are becoming more pessimistic and could cut back on spending.
Reports note that the ECB, similar to the Fed, is pressed against the wall and must face inflationary pressures head-on. Reuters reporter Balazs Koranyi says “markets are now pricing in 60 basis points of rate hikes by the end of the year.” In a note to clients on Friday morning, the senior Europe economist at Capital Economics, Jack Allen-Reynolds, wrote that the firm has “penciled in three 25 basis points rate hikes for this year.”
“With euro-zone inflation rising even further above the ECB’s forecast, and likely to remain very high for the rest of the year, we think it won’t be long before the Bank starts raising interest rates,” the economist said on Friday. Reports further indicate that investors from Spain and Germany are betting on the ECB to spur rate hikes this year.
Danish Politician Margrethe Vestager Tries to Persuade EU Residents to Avoid Long Hot Showers
Much of the blame for the rising inflation throughout the 19 countries is also similar to the U.S., as European bankers and bureaucrats are blaming the Ukraine-Russia war. Deutsche Bank’s chief investment officer Christian Nolting explained in a note that elevated inflation may persist. “In the developed economies, already elevated inflation rates may now be driven even higher, given the conflict-induced oil and gas price shock,” Nolting wrote. “Sanctions, as well as businesses’ halting their operations in Russia, are exacerbating supply chain problems.”
Currently, there is very little reporting concerning the EU’s Covid-19 policy spending, the ECB’s long-term negative rates, and the ECB’s massive monetary expansion over the last two years. Before the eurozone’s inflation data was published, Germany’s economic minister Robert Habeck pleaded with Germans to reduce their energy consumption.
“There are currently no supply shortages,” Habeck remarked. “Nevertheless, we must increase precautionary measures in order to be prepared in the event of an escalation on the part of Russia.” Interestingly, the Danish politician and European Commissioner for Competition, Margrethe Vestager, tried to persuade EU residents to stop taking long hot showers. Vestager said:
Every time you turn off your hot shower water, say — Take that, Putin!
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