German Inflation Slows Sharply as War-Induced Energy Spike Fades

German inflation eased significantly, thanks largely to natural gas costs tumbling following their surge after Russia invaded Ukraine just over a year ago.

(Bloomberg) — German inflation eased significantly, thanks largely to natural gas costs tumbling following their surge after Russia invaded Ukraine just over a year ago.

Consumer prices in Europe’s biggest economy rose 7.8% in March compared with 9.3% in February, the statistics office said Thursday.

The result was more than the 7.5% median estimate in a Bloomberg poll of economists, but still offers some relief for the European Central Bank, whose officials have hiked rates by 350 basis points since last July to tackle the worst spike in prices of the euro era.

Many policymakers, however, fret that underlying inflation — which strips out volatile items like food and energy — remains elevated. Despite Spain’s headline gauge almost almost halving this month to 3.1%, its core measure only edged down to 7.5%.

While Germany doesn’t provide an underlying reading in its initial report, Bloomberg Economics said before the data were published that core price gains probably accelerated to 5.5% in March from 5.4% in February. 

How the country-level figures feed through to the 20-nation euro zone will be revealed Friday, with analysts expecting the main measure of inflation to slow to 7.1% even as the core gauge ticks up to a record 5.7%.

Wages are a key factor that officials are monitoring for signs that price growth is becoming entrenched. Talks with workers in Germany’s public sector, who want a double-digit pay rise, ended without a deal overnight and will go to independent arbitration.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government has implemented wide-ranging measures to cushion the blow of higher prices for gas and power. But while proving more resilient than expected after a rapid turn away from Russian fuel supplies, Germany is forecast to experience a mild recession in the six months through March.

For the ECB, battling inflation has been further complicated as the tensions gripping banks around the world threaten to hinder credit and curb economic growth.

Governing Council member Peter Kazimir said Wednesday that while the ECB should continue raising rates, it should maybe do so more slowly, citing a “real risk” of banks curbing lending in the wake of the recent financial-industry turmoil.

–With assistance from Kristian Siedenburg and Joel Rinneby.

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