Currencies

Spanish Inflation Eased to 20-Month Low in March Driven by Lower Energy Prices


By Xavier Fontdegloria

Spain’s inflation rate eased more than expected in March, reaching its lowest level in 20 months as energy prices sank from a year earlier, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent them surging.

The consumer price index–which measures what consumers pay for goods and services–increased 3.1% in March on year measured by European Union-harmonized standards, down sharply from the 6% on-year rise registered in February, preliminary data from the Spanish statistics office INE showed Thursday.

This marks the lowest inflation rate since July 2021, and came in below the 4.2% expected by economists in a poll from The Wall Street Journal.

The consumer price index rose 3.3% in March by national standards, easing from the 6% increase seen in February.

The marked decrease in annual inflation was mainly driven by lower energy prices than a year before, when the war in Ukraine began. Electricity and fuel prices fell in March while they increased the same month a year earlier, INE said.

Core inflation–which exclude the more volatile categories of food and energy–slowed slightly to 7.5% in March from 7.6% in February.

Compared with the previous month, consumer prices rose 0.4% by national standards and increased 1.1% by EU-harmonized standards, INE said.

Spanish inflation is expected to average 3.7% in 2023, down from 4.9% previously anticipated, according to projections from the Bank of Spain. However, core inflation is expected to ease at a slower pace than headline inflation, according to the bank’s March economic bulletin.

Write to Xavier Fontdegloria at [email protected]

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

03-30-23 0315ET



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