Eurozone Inflation Up 6.1% in May... Lowest Since Ukraine War Outbreak
The year-on-year consumer price inflation in the Eurozone (EU) for May significantly slowed down compared to the previous month.
Citizens are shopping at Torvehallerne Market in Copenhagen, Denmark.
[Photo by Lee Chunhee]
According to Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union (EU), on the 16th (local time), consumer prices in the Eurozone rose by 6.1% in May compared to the same month last year. This is a 0.9 percentage point decrease from the 7.0% increase recorded in April. This is the lowest level since February last year (5.9%), when Russia invaded Ukraine, triggering the war.
The core inflation rate, excluding food and energy sectors, also recorded 5.3%, down 0.3 percentage points from 5.6% in April. This suggests that the EU inflation rate, which had repeatedly hit record highs due to last year's sharp rise in energy prices, is gradually stabilizing.
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By sector, the price increase rate for food, alcoholic beverages, and tobacco was high at 12.5%. Although the increase narrowed by 0.9 percentage points compared to 13.5% in April, a rapid upward trend continues. Non-energy industrial goods rose by 5.8%, and the services sector increased by 5.0%. Energy prices fell by 1.8%.
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