Khaleej Times

EU inflation stays negative in March but ‘core’ prices rise

- Jan Strupczews­ki and Balazs Koranyi

BRUSSELS/FRANKFURT — The fall in euro area inflation slowed this month while core figures, which strip out volatile food and energy prices, accelerate­d, mildly positive news for the European Central Bank as it struggles to revive anaemic price growth.

Annualised inflation picked up to -0.1 per cent from -0.2 per cent, in line with expectatio­ns, as rising food and services prices offset another big fall in energy costs, data from Eurostat showed.

The inflation tick-up, presaged by surprising­ly high German figures on Wednesday, is the latest in a string of slightly positive data for the 19-nation currency bloc, indicating that the euro zone’s tepid domestic recovery remains on track despite headwinds from abroad.

The ECB has been battling ultralow inflation for years and unveiled an unexpected­ly big stimulus package this month, cutting rates deeper into negative territory, expanding monthly asset buys by a third and offering free loans to banks.

Core inflation, a figure closely watched to gauge underlying trends, picked up to 0.9 per cent from 0.8 per cent, broadly in line with its recent trend and with expectatio­ns, alleviatin­g some fears that low energy prices are feeding into the cost of other goods and services. The ECB especially fears these so-called second-round deflationa­ry effects from falling crude prices as they could lead to low price growth becoming entrenched.

Still, inflation remains far below the ECB’s target of nearly two per cent and is not expected to return to target over the next three years. This indicates the central bank will have to keep rates exceptiona­lly low and keep the door open to even more stimulus.

Indeed, the ECB expects inflation to average just 0.1 per cent this year before a pickup in 2017. But the forecasts could prove overly pessimisti­c, analysts say, as the bank assumed Brent crude prices of $34.9 for the year, more than 10 per cent below the prevailing level.

Still, recent data about the eurozone’s economic health indicate that the bloc’s domestic recovery is on track despite headwinds coming from a slowdown in emerging markets, particular­ly China.

 ??  ?? Customers shop for goods at a market in Bilbao. Core inflation picked up to 0.9 per cent from 0.8 per cent in EU.
Customers shop for goods at a market in Bilbao. Core inflation picked up to 0.9 per cent from 0.8 per cent in EU.

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