Producer Price Inflation Tapers Off

On an annual basis, three countries exceeded 50% producer-price inflation: Ireland (63.4%), Romania (57.7%), and Denmark (53.8%). At 6.2%, Malta had the lowest in
On an annual basis, three countries exceeded 50% producer-price inflation: Ireland (63.4%), Romania (57.7%), and Denmark (53.8%). At 6.2%, Malta had the lowest in

There may be some alleviation coming in terms of inflation. In an April 6th statistical update, Eurostat reports a slowdown in producer-price inflation in the EU:

In February 2022, industrial producer prices rose by 1.1% in both the euro area and the EU, compared with January 2022, according to estimates from Eurostat … In January, prices increased by 5.1% in the euro area and 5.0% in the EU.

If the 1.1% month-to-month rate would remain for a whole year, it would translate into a 14% rate of annual producer-price inflation. This is notably lower than the inflation from February 2021 to February 2022, when producer prices increased by 31.4% in the eurozone and 31.1% in the EU as a whole.

February month-to-month inflation in producer prices varied across the EU, from 13.6% in Slovakia, 5.7% in Slovenia, 4.8% in Greece, and 2.5% in Luxembourg to deflation in Ireland (-8.1%), Finland (-0.5%), Latvia (-0.3%), and Bulgaria (-0.1%). 

On an annual basis, three countries exceeded 50% producer-price inflation: Ireland (63.4%), Romania (57.7%), and Denmark (53.8%). At 6.2%, Malta had the lowest inflation rate by a large margin.

Broken down by industrial sector, monthly inflation was led by intermediate goods (1.6%), followed by energy (1.3%), and consumer perishables (0.8%). Measured year to year, the energy sector led by 87.2%.

On an annual basis, three countries exceeded 50% producer-price inflation: Ireland (63.4%), Romania (57.7%), and Denmark (53.8%). At 6.2%, Malta had the lowest inflation rate by a large margin.

Sven R Larson, Ph.D., is an economics writer for the European Conservative, where he publishes regular analyses of the European and American economies. He has worked as a staff economist for think tanks and as an advisor to political campaigns. He is the author of several academic papers and books. His writings concentrate on the welfare state, how it causes economic stagnation, and the reforms needed to reduce the negative impact of big government. On Twitter, he is @S_R_Larson