Spanish Inflation Is Now Under ECB’s 2% Goal at a Two-Year Low
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2023-06-29 15:25
Spanish inflation slowed to below the 2% level targeted by the European Central Bank, a small victory for

Spanish inflation slowed to below the 2% level targeted by the European Central Bank, a small victory for Frankfurt officials battling to tame cost increases across the wider euro region.

Consumer prices rose 1.6% in June from a year earlier, down from 2.9% the previous month, as increases in energy and food bills continued to ease, according to the country’s statistics agency. That’s the weakest pace of inflation in more than two years.

ECB officials won’t take much reassurance from the data in the region’s fourth-biggest economy, despite the dramatic improvement. Policymakers remain perturbed at the underlying pace of price growth in the euro area, which is likely to have re-accelerated in a report due Friday.

“The evolution of core inflation, of underlying inflation — that, I think is very relevant in the present circumstances,” ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos told Bloomberg Television on Wednesday. “Perhaps, you know, core inflation is going to be stickier than we believe.”

Spain’s own underlying measure, based on a different index and basket than the euro-zone’s gauge, slowed to 5.9% in June from 6.1%.

Italian data on Wednesday showed a drastic improvement in the headline index too, though at 6.7%, inflation there remains far above the ECB’s goal. France may also report a slowdown in price growth on Friday.

Later on Thursday, officials in Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, are expected to reveal an acceleration. Numbers released earlier from North Rhine Westphalia, the country’s largest state, showed an increase of 0.5 percentage point to 6.2% in inflation, measured on national criteria.

Those data will lead up to the publication of numbers for the euro region as a whole. Economists anticipate headline rate of inflation fell to 5.6%, while the underlying measure rose to 5.5%.

A former Spanish finance minister, de Guindos said that another ECB rate increase in July is a “fait accompli,” while there’s an open question on what to do at the subsequent meeting in September. That’s the focus of debate among officials at present.

Spanish Economy Minister Nadia Calvino said last week that Spain may not need more rate hikes, though she acknowledged that the ECB “is looking at Europe as a whole.”

Despite slowing price growth there, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who is trailing in polls ahead of a July 23 snap general vote, on Tuesday extended an anti-inflation package of €3.8 billion ($4.2 billion) in tax cuts and subsidies.

--With assistance from Ainhoa Goyeneche and Joel Rinneby.

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