The Philippine Star

Inflation in euro area hits record 8.9% in July

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LONDON (AP) – Inflation in the European countries using the euro currency shot up to another record in July, pushed by higher energy prices fueled by Russia’s war in Ukraine, but the economy managed better-than-expected, if meager, growth in the second quarter.

Annual inflation in the eurozone’s 19 countries rose to 8.9 percent in July, an increase from 8.6 percent in June, according to numbers published Friday by the European Union statistics agency.

For months, inflation has been running at its highest levels since 1997, when recordkeep­ing for the euro began, leading the European Central Bank to raise interest rates last week for the first time in 11 years to tamp down prices.

The euro-area economy managed to expand by 0.7 percent from April through July over the previous quarter, contrastin­g with the contractio­n in the US, where fears are growing of a recession. The outlook is just as gloomy for Europe.

Analysts say the economic growth tied to a rebound in tourism could be the last glimmer of upbeat news, with inflation, rising interest rates and a worsening energy crisis fueled by the war expected to push the euro area into recession later this year.

“This is as likely to be as good as it will get for the eurozone for the foreseeabl­e future,” Andrew Kenningham, chief Europe economist for Capital Economics, wrote in an analyst note.

Growth already has stagnated in Germany, Europe’s traditiona­l economic engine, after being hit with a series of cuts in Russian natural gas used for industry. France avoided fears of a recession by posting modest 0.5 percent growth in the second quarter, while Italy and Spain exceeded expectatio­ns with one percent and 1.1 percent expansions, respective­ly.

Energy prices, meanwhile, surged in the eurozone by 39.7 percent this month, only slightly lower than June due to gas supply concerns. Prices for food, alcohol and tobacco rose by 9.8 percent, faster than the increase posted last month because of higher transport costs, shortages and uncertaint­y around Ukrainian supply.

“Another ugly inflation reading for July,” said Bert Colijn, senior eurozone economist for ING bank, adding that there was “no imminent sign of relief.”

The US is also facing high inflation, clocking in at 40year highs, but unlike Europe, has already seen its economy shrink for two straight quarters. At the same time, the job market is stronger than before the COVID-19 pandemic, and most economists, including Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, have said they don’t think the economy is in recession.

Many, however, increasing­ly expect an economic downturn in the US to begin later this year or next, much like in Europe.

Europe’s risk is largely tied to its reliance on Russian energy, with Moscow throttling down flows of natural gas that power factories, generate electricit­y and heat homes in the winter.

More reductions this week through a major pipeline to Germany, Nord Stream 1, have heightened fears that the Kremlin may cut off supplies completely. That would force rationing for energy-intensive industries and spike already record-high levels of inflation driven by soaring energy prices, threatenin­g to plunge the 27-nation bloc into recession.

While European Union government­s approved a measure this week to reduce gas use by 15 percent and have passed tax cuts and subsidies to ease a cost-of-living crisis, Europe is at the mercy of Russia and the weather.

A cold winter, when natural gas demand soars, could draw down storage levels that government­s are now scrambling to fill but has been made infinitely harder by Russia’s cuts.

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