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How Germany’s soaring inflation is hitting household budgets

From paring back on meat products to filling the tank at certain times of day, high inflation can have a big impact on spending choices. Here are the everyday products in Germany that are seeing record price hikes right now.

How Germany's soaring inflation is hitting household budgets
A customer pays for groceries at a shop in Berlin Schöneberg. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christoph Soeder

What’s going on?

The cost of living has been rising steeply in Germany for several months, and the latest official inflation figures are the highest yet.

According to the Federal Office of Statistics (Destatis), consumer prices in May this year were a whopping 7.9 percent higher than they were in the same month last year.

This is a higher rate of inflation than at an other time since reunification. In fact, you’d have to look way back to 1973/74 – when the world was in the grip of a global oil crisis – to find price hikes as steep as this.

Once again, energy has a lot to do with the current crisis: as the world started to return to normal after the first waves of the Covid-19 pandemic, there were global supply issues with oil and natural gas, which drove up the price of energy significantly.

READ ALSO: German consumer prices climb again in May

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, the situation has only got worse as Western countries scramble to reduce their dependency on fossil fuels from the aggressive superpower. 

This time, though, it’s not just about energy. Both Russia and Ukraine are major exporters of grain, which is unable to be delivered from Russia due to sanctions and unable to be delivered from Ukraine due to the fact that trade ports are currently blocked. 

This has created a double-whammy whereby numerous food products have shot up in price and other day-to-day products have become more expensive due to increased transport costs and the general costs of running a business. 

Which products have gone up the most in price? 

Though 7.9 percent is the average inflation rate, a wide range of popular everyday products have increased at a much faster rate over the past year. For most households, food has been one of the most noticeable ones. 

Sebastian Dullien, Scientific Director of the Macroeconomic Policy Institute (IMK) of the Hans Böckler Foundation, says that the shortage of grain supplies from Ukraine and Russia is having a knock-on effect on some numerous dietary staples. 

“This is now reflected in higher prices for products such as flour, pasta, but also eggs and meat, as a considerable part of the grain from Ukraine and Russia was used as animal feed,” said Dullien.

For everyday groceries as a whole, prices jumped up by more than 11 percent last month compared to May 2021. 

Chickens on a farm in Hannover

Chickens roam free on a farm in Hannover. Much of Germany’s grain supply is used as animal feed. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Julian Stratenschulte

According to Destatis, however, this was only around half of the price increase that supermarkets faced in the same month: in May 2022, wholesale food suppliers were charging an average of 22.9 percent more than they were a year before. 

In April, producers of agricultural products had already hiked their prices by 39.9 percent compared to the previous year. 

Overall in the food category, butter saw the steepest jump in price with an increase of 43 percent against 2021, closely followed by cooking oils and fats, which increased by 38.7 percent, and flour and other cereal products, at 33 percent.  

Meat and dairy lovers have also been getting a shock at the supermarket lately: meat products jumped up by 16 percent last month, while dairy products and eggs went up by 13 percent.

With grain in short supply, bread has also jumped in price by around 10 percent year on year. 

READ ALSO: What to know about the latest price hikes in German supermarkets

What about energy prices?

There’s still no reprieve on this side either. 

In May 2022, people in Germany had to pay 38.3 percent more for energy than a year ago.

Heating oil was almost twice as expensive, while natural gas was around 55 percent more expensive and prices for fuel (41 percent) and electricity (21.5 percent) also increased significantly.

How long will this go on for?

Though everybody is hoping that the current inflation is just a short-term blip, experts say there’s unlikely to be any slowing of the price rises in the near future.

“Since there are no signs of an easing in prices for energy and food on the world market so far, inflation in Germany is also likely to remain high in the coming months at least until the end of the year,” said Dullien. 

Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir (Greens) also believes that prices will continue to rise in the coming months, with the potential for even steeper increases in the cooler months. 

Cem Özdemir

Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir (Greens) speaks at a press conference on June 7th. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Fabian Sommer

“A lot of things are unfortunately yet to come,” Özdemir told the Rheinische Post. “We have to expect increases in autumn and winter because retailers now have to stock up on expensive energy and the price increases will be passed on to customers.”

Nevertheless, the government has been attempting to soften the blow of the rising prices a little for consumers.

Two packages of energy relief measures have so far been agreed by the governing coalition, including a budget transport ticket, an increase in the commuter allowance, a fuel tax cut and other one-off lump sums for benefits claimants and employees. 

Özdemir has also proposed that the government lower the VAT on certain food products to help out struggling households.

“Logic, simplicity and sustainability are the keywords here,” he said. “That’s where you quickly end up with my proposal.”

READ ALSO: 

Member comments

  1. Inflation is literally caused buy governments printing money. The government alone are pretty much entirely responsible for inflation. Their policies have caused this. Not war or corona. Its not hit its worst yet. Unfortunately Germany have to also worry about ECB so the Next few years are really going to test the Euro. Has anyone got any D-marks left?

    But I bet our beloved traffic light can borrow thier way out of it….

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BUSINESS & INDUSTRY

Intel chip plant delay latest blow for struggling German economy

Struggling with high energy costs and softening demand for its exports, the last thing Germany needed was Intel announcing it is delaying plans to build a massive chip factory.

Intel chip plant delay latest blow for struggling German economy

Intel’s delay

The US chip giant announced Monday it is postponing plans for its project in Germany for two years as it focuses more on the United States.

This is a blow to Berlin, which had pledged 10 billion euros ($11 billion) – a third of the cost – to build the production plant in the eastern city of Magdeburg.

While Intel’s own struggles are the immediate cause for the delay, it has also fuelled concerns that Germany is becoming less attractive as a place to do business.

In this year’s ranking of the most competitive economies by Swiss business school IMD, Germany slipped two spots to 24th, with taxes, bureaucracy and poor infrastructure cited as major handicaps.

Volkswagen stalls

Auto titan Volkswagen announced earlier this month it could take the unprecedented step of closing factories in Germany for the first time in its 87-year history.

READ ALSO: Will there be job losses and plant closures at Volkswagen in Germany?

Europe’s biggest carmaker is struggling with high costs, problems in the transition to electric vehicles, and fierce competition from local rivals in key market China.

(FILES) Employees of German car maker Volkswagen (VW) protest at the start of a company's general meeting in Wolfsburg, northern Germany, on September 4, 2024.

Employees of German car maker Volkswagen (VW) protest at the start of a company’s general meeting in Wolfsburg, northern Germany, on September 4, 2024. Photo by Moritz Frankenberg / POOL / AFP

A week after VW’s shock announcement, BMW announced it was recalling 1.5 million vehicles due to problems with their brakes and downgraded its outlook for the year, also citing problems in China.

Steel storm

Efforts by Thyssenkrupp to spin off its loss-making steel division and get its business back on track ran into trouble last month when a host of senior executives quit in protest at the what they said was the unacceptable behaviour of the group’s CEO.

The row centres around plans to restructure the division, which operates Europe’s largest steelworks in Duisburg, western Germany.

The conglomerate wants to separate the steelmaking unit from its other activities, which include building submarines, as it faces higher manufacturing costs and competition from cheaper Asian steel.

It already announced that it plans to cut jobs in Duisburg and reduce production.

Firms face being gobbled up

Deutsche Bahn announced last week that logistics unit Schenker, traditionally one of its most profitable arms, is to be sold to Danish group DSV, with unions fearful it could lead to thousands of job losses in Germany.

Meanwhile Italian bank UniCredit is targeting a takeover of Commerzbank after building up a nine-percent stake in Germany’s second-biggest lender, a development that reportedly blindsided Berlin and has angered German unions.

Still some say such takeovers also highlight that German firms remain attractive, despite the woes of the broader economy.

Poor indicators

After starting the year on a positive note, recent surveys – from business morale to consumer confidence – have been on a downward trend, denting hopes of a strong rebound.

Some economic institutes have cut their forecasts, and now expect either stagnation or a slight recession for the whole year.

In its last official forecast in April, the economy ministry still expected growth of 0.3 percent this year, but it may downgrade that forecast when it updates the figure soon.

Commenting after a recent batch of negative data, ING economist Carsten Brzeski summed up Germany’s problems: “Years of stagnation, and underestimating technological trends and international competition do not come without consequences.”

By Sophie MAKRIS

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