Inflation in EU Accelerates, Czech Prices Jump to 4th Highest

czech inflation

The average annual inflation in the European Union accelerated to 2 percent in April from 1.7 percent in March, the European Statistical Office announced on Wednesday.

Inflation in the Czech Republic is the fourth highest in the entire EU, standing at 3.1 percent. Of the 27 member states, prices are rising fastest in Hungary, by 5.2 percent. It is followed by neighboring Poland with inflation of 5.1 percent and Luxembourg with year-on-year price growth of 3.3 percent.

In the eurozone, year-on-year consumer price inflation accelerated from 1.3 percent in March to 1.6 percent. The European Central Bank (ECB) aims to keep price growth below 2 percent.

Czech inflation is the fourth highest

In the Czech Republic, inflation reached 3.1 percent, making it the fourth highest in the EU. The Czech National Bank (CNB) has been targeting 2 percent inflation since December 2005 but has a so-called tolerance zone between 1 and 3 percent.

“Inflation has returned above the upper limit of the CNB’s tolerance zone and is even above the central bank’s forecast. At the same time, it will likely continue to stay close to 3 percent,“ said analyst Petr Dufek.

“The central bank has basically no chance to do anything with this year’s inflation, and it will, therefore, focus on meeting its target in 2022, which is not threatened in any way,” he added.


Deflation in Greece and Portugal

The term inflation refers to the growth of the price level, but if prices fall, then a country experiences deflation. This phenomenon is currently observed in two EU countries, Portugal and Greece, where prices fell by 0.1 percent year-on-year.

Inflation is also very low in Malta, where year-on-year consumer price inflation reached 0.1 percent in April.

 

prague morning advertisment

Related Posts
Share via
Copy link
Powered by Social Snap