The Denver Post

Why are prices so high in Europe?

- By Eshe Nelson

It is the most basic of staple food items: sliced white bread. In Britain, the average price of a loaf was 28% higher in April, at $1.72, than it was a year earlier.

In Italy, the price of spaghetti and other pasta, a fixture of the Italian diet, has risen nearly 17% from the year before. In Germany, the European Union’s largest economy, cheese prices are nearly 40% higher than a year ago, and potatoes cost 14% more.

Throughout the European Union, consumer food prices were on average nearly 17% higher in April than a year earlier, a slight slowdown from the previous month, which set the fastest pace of growth in over two and a half decades.

The situation is worse in Britain than in its Western European neighbors: Food and nonalcohol­ic drink prices were 19% higher, the quickest pace of annual food inflation in more than 45 years. By comparison, the annual rate of U. S. food inflation was 7.7%.

Persistent food inf lation is squeezing low- income households and troubling European politician­s. (In Italy, the government held a meeting this month to discuss soaring pasta prices.)

At the same time, the major costs that go into making food products, including fuel, wheat and other agricultur­al commoditie­s, have been falling in internatio­nal markets for much of the past year — raising questions about why food prices for consumers remain so high in Europe. And with rising labor costs and the possibilit­y of profiteeri­ng, food prices are unlikely to come down anytime soon. More broadly, rising prices also could put pressure on central banks to keep interest rates high, potentiall­y restrainin­g economic growth.

What is driving up food prices?

Behind the sticker price for a loaf of bread includes the costs for not only key ingredient­s but also processing, packaging, transport, wages, storage and company markups.

A United Nations index of global food commodity prices, such as wheat, meat and vegetable oil, peaked in March 2022, immediatel­y after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which is one of the largest grain producers. The war disrupted grain and oil production in the region and had global impact, too, worsening food crises in parts of East Africa and the Middle East.

But the worst was avoided, in part because of a deal to export grain from Ukraine. European wheat prices have declined about 40% since May 2022. Global vegetable oil prices are down about 50%. But there is still a ways to go: The United Nations’ food

price index was 34% higher in April than its 2019 average.

Aside from commodit y prices, Europe has experience­d particular­ly harsh increases in costs along the food supply chain.

Energy prices soared because the war forced Europe to replace Russian gas rapidly with new supplies, pushing up the costs of food production, transport and storage.

Although wholesale energy prices have fallen back down recently, retailers warn there’s a long lag — perhaps up to a year — before consumers will see the benefits of that because energy contracts were made months before, most likely reflecting those higher prices.

And the tight labor markets in Europe with high job vacancy rates and low levels of unemployme­nt are forcing employers, including food companies, to push up wages to attract workers. This in turn drives up costs for businesses, including in the food sector.

Is profiteeri­ng keeping prices high?

Suspicions are growing among consumers, trade unions and some economists that inf lation could be kept needlessly high by companies raising prices above their costs to protect profit margins.

The European Central Bank said that at the end of last year, corporate profits were contributi­ng to domestic inflation as much as wage growth, without specifying particular industries.

Economists at Allianz, the German insurer and asset manager, estimate that 10% to 20% of food inflation in Europe can be attributed to profiteeri­ng. “There is part of the food price inflation that we see which is not explainabl­e, easily,” said Ludovic Subran, chief economist at Allianz.

But the lack of detailed data about corporate profits and supply chains has caused a rift in economic opinions.

Some economists and food retailers have pointed fingers at big global food producers, which have sustained doubledigi­t profit margins while raising prices. Even taking into account expenses such as transport and accounting for pricing lags from farms to shelves, Subran said he would have expected food inflation to come down by now.

In Britain, some economists are telling a different story. Michael Saunders, an economist at Oxford Economics and former rate-setter at the Bank of England, said in a note to clients in May that “greedflati­on” was not the culprit. Most of the increase in inflation reflects the higher cost of energy and other commoditie­s, he said.

Have food prices peaked?

Despite well-publicized cuts to milk prices in Britain, food prices in general are unlikely to go down in the near future.

Instead, policymake­rs are closely watching for a slowdown in the rate of increases.

There are tentative signs that the pace of food inflation — the double- digit increase in annual prices — has reached its pinnacle. In April, the rate fell in the European Union for the first time in two years.

But the slowdown from here is likely to be gradual.

“It appears to be taking longer for food price pressures to work their way through the system this time than we had expected,” Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, said this month.

Across the continent, some government­s are intervenin­g by capping prices on food essentials, rather than waiting for economic debates about corporate profiteeri­ng to play out. In France, the government is pushing an “anti-inflation quarter,” asking food retailers to cut prices on some products until June.

But the finance minister, Bruno Le Maire, said this month that he wanted food producers to contribute more to the effort, warning they could face tax penalties to recover any margins unfairly made at the expense of consumers if they refuse to return to negotiatio­ns.

These efforts may help some shoppers, but on the whole there is little to comfort Europeans.

Food prices are unlikely to decline — it’s likely only that the pace of increases will slow this year.

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