Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Inflation presses nations to take action

- JOSEPH WILSON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Monika Scislowska, Vanessa Gera, Emra Gurel, Suzan Fraser, David Biller and Frank Jordans of The Associated Press.

BARCELONA, Spain — Oscar Banos and thousands of fellow truck drivers celebrated Saturday after a threat to idle their engines pushed the Spanish government to adopt measures improving work conditions and checking skyrocketi­ng fuel costs driven by inflation.

It’s the latest effort by workers, opposition leaders and citizens to pressure government­s from Europe to the Americas to intervene as surging consumer prices squeeze households and businesses.

Banos loves hauling freight across Spain as his father did before him but was ready to lose much-needed cash during a three-day work stoppage just before Christmas. After days of negotiatio­ns, the truck companies called off the Monday-to-Wednesday action after Spain’s transport ministry agreed to demands that include controls to help cushion the blow of rising diesel costs.

“I spent 1,500 euros [$1,694] more in October for the same liters of diesel than I had the year before,” the 48-year-old said recently while hauling a load of rubber. “With that cost, it is impossible.”

Political pressure has led countries including Poland, Hungary and the U.S. to take steps such as institutin­g caps on gas prices, pledging money for poor households or releasing oil from strategic reserves. Spain was among places like Turkey seeing more intense efforts such as protests and work stoppages tied to complaints about inflation, which has surged as the global economy rebounded from the pandemic, increasing demand for smaller supplies of energy and snarling supply chains.

While government­s are taking action, they have few effective resources to bring meaningful, lasting relief, economists say, offering short-term aid that likely will do little to combat surging prices. That’s up to central banks, some of which have started raising interest rates to ease inflation.

Spain’s inflation is at a 29-year high of 5.5%, and like countries worldwide, one of the biggest drivers is energy costs: gasoline has risen 63%, while electricit­y for households and businesses is up 47% over the past year.

This week, dozens of trailer trucks rolled slowly through Madrid in a “slow march” protest. Many truckers feel that while they helped keep the country going when Spain entered a shutdown during the depths of the pandemic, they are being left behind by Europe’s focus on a greener economy that’s moving from diesel engines to electric vehicles.

The government’s late Friday concession­s included regulation­s to make a difficult job easier and attract young people: a ban on drivers loading and unloading trucks and an end to long waits at their destinatio­n. Spain also guaranteed a mandate that all trucking companies increase their tariffs in line with diesel costs so competitor­s don’t undercut each other, eroding profits and driving some to the brink of extinction.

With inflation at the highest level in 39 years, U.S. President Joe Biden has released 50 million barrels of oil from the U.S. strategic petroleum reserve in a bid to ease energy costs and announced a deal to make the Port of Los Angeles run 24/7 to ease supply backlogs. But economists say the actions are unlikely to make a big difference in surging prices anytime soon.

Hungary instituted a cap on gasoline and diesel costs at the pump as prices hit record highs. It comes as the right-wing governing party faces elections in the coming months that pose the most serious challenge to its power since being elected in 2010. Some economists have called it a political decision that will provide some relief to households but could drive smaller gas stations out of business.

In Poland, the government has blamed the European Union’s anti-coal climate policy for high energy prices, but the head of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency says a surge in demand for fossil fuels plays a bigger role. Opposition lawmaker Michal Krawczyk recently said the ruling Law and Justice Party has clung too long to coal, and “your policy, not the EU’s, has led us to this.”

“This year’s Christmas will be the most expensive in this century,” he said. Opposition leaders are pushing the government to help people in the central European country where consumer prices have surged 7.8% over the past year.

The lower house of Poland’s parliament passed a measure last week promising cash allowances to the poorest families for energy bills. The aid will range from $122 to $305 per household, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said.

It’s part of an anti-inflation package that also includes tax cuts on electricit­y, heating fuel and gas for vehicles, officials said.

“The anti-inflation shield will not answer all the problems — that is not possible — but it shows that we are doing all we can to ease this inflation pain, to reduce the costs for the Polish families,” Morawiecki said.

In Brazil, where inflation has accelerate­d to 10.74% — its fastest pace in 18 years — and some poor people root through meat scraps for protein, its one complaint in demonstrat­ions against President Jair Bolsonaro’s government in recent months.

In response to rising prices, the country’s central bank has raised interest rates, also done this week by the Bank of England and Norway’s central bank.

Turkey, meanwhile, is slashing rates. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insists high interest rates cause consumer prices to soar, contrary to convention­al economic thinking. Inflation of 21% has left many struggling to buy basic goods such as food.

Thousands of people joined a rally Sunday in Istanbul to protest the soaring cost of living and demand a higher minimum wage. By Thursday, the government said it was increasing the monthly minimum by 50%, from about $171 to $258.

Hatice Sahin, 50, a municipali­ty worker and single mother of three, said people can’t make ends meet.

“The food prices are exorbitant. We just cannot live,” she said.

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