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German inflation hits record high amid Ukraine conflict

People shop in a supermarket in Bad Honnef near Bonn, Germany, April 27, 2020. (Photo by Reuters)

Energy prices and subsequent inflation in Germany have risen at their fastest pace in four decades due to the ongoing Russia's operation inside Ukraine.

Data published by federal statistics agency Destatis Thursday showed consumer prices were 7.4 percent higher in April compared to a year ago. In March, the corresponding figure reached 7.3 percent.

"Energy prices, in particular, have increased considerably since the conflict started in Ukraine" with a knock-on impact for inflation, the Destatis said in a statement.

Year-on-year prices for energy in the inflation statistics rose by 35.3 percent, while food costs increased by 8.5 percent in April, according to Destatis.

Carsten Brzeski, head of macro at the ING bank, a global financial institution of Dutch origin, also predicted that German inflation would likely "accelerate further in the coming months".

While the soaring cost of energy is still the main driving force behind rising prices, "the pass-through to all kinds of sectors is still in full swing", Brzeski said.

Germany and several other European states are highly dependent on supplies of Russian gas to meet their energy needs. Europe depends on Russia for about 40% of its natural gas, with most transported by pipeline. Some pipelines transit Ukraine, while others take alternative routes.

On Wednesday, the Russian energy giant Gazprom stopped deliveries to Poland and Bulgaria for refusing to pay in rubles.

The last time prices rose at a faster pace was for West Germany in the autumn of 1981, as the Iraq's imposed war against Iran caused oil prices to increase sharply.

Some European traders have started to pay Russia for gas sales in rules, Reuters said on Thursday, citing sources familiar with the matter.

"Several traders, maybe more than five, have started payments," one source told the news agency.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has demanded that countries he terms "unfriendly" must pay for gas in rubles or be cut off.

Under the new Russian payment system, buyers are obliged to deposit euros or dollars into an account at Gazprombank, which has then to convert them into rubles, place the proceeds in another account owned by the foreign buyer and transfer the payment in Russian currency to Gazprom.

The scheme was designed as a response to sweeping Western sanctions against Russia.

Meanwhile, European Central Bank expects inflation in the eurozone to even out at 5.1 percent over 2022 in a "baseline" scenario where Russian gas continues to flow. The Frankfurt-based institution has come under increasing pressure from rising prices to raise interest rates from historic lows.

ECB vice-president Luis de Guindos earlier Thursday told a committee of the European Parliament that inflation in the eurozone was "very close" to reaching its peak.

The 27-nation currency bloc should "start to see inflation decline in the second half of the year", he said

Inflation would nonetheless "be high even in the last quarter", staying above the bank's two-percent target, de Guindos noted.

Elsewhere, Destatis said coronavirus-related lockdowns in China have notably disrupted deliveries from the key manufacturing hub. "Delivery bottlenecks due to interruptions in supply chains caused by the Covid-19 pandemic" had also delivered a bump to inflation.


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