Inflation in Germany continued to rise and reached 7.9 percent in May.

The Federal Statistical Office in Wiesbaden announced this on Monday after an initial estimate.

In April, the inflation rate was still 7.4 percent.

Christian Siedenbiedel

Editor in Business.

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The figures from the state statistical offices, for example from North Rhine-Westphalia, reveal more details about what has become more expensive.

"The renewed increase in the inflation rate is driven by the slightly higher oil prices in May, after a small correction in April - and above all by higher food prices," says economist Holger Schmieding from Bankhaus Berenberg.

"Putin's war is hitting consumers even harder than before."

Grilled food is also becoming more expensive

The price increase for food accelerated from 10.2 percent in April to 12.7 percent in May compared to the previous year.

Edible fats and oils even went up by 40.3 percent.

But consumers also had to dig deeper into their pockets for other foods.

"The fact that meat and meat products are 17.5 percent more expensive is likely to spoil the fun of the barbecue season for some consumers," says Schmieding.

In the case of fruit and vegetables, on the other hand, the rise in prices has slowed somewhat.

"Healthy nutrition seems to be getting a little less expensive because we are less dependent on Russia and Ukraine there than we are for grain, animal feed and edible oils," says Schmieding.

Household energy rose by 40.1 percent, while fuel prices accelerated to 40.5 percent after 37.4 percent in April.

Aside from food and energy, the picture is mixed, says Schmieding.

After a strong Easter travel season compared to the previous year, the upward trend in prices for package tours largely normalized in May.

The inflation rate for clothing fell from 3.7 to 1.6 percent.

On the other hand, the delivery bottlenecks for durable consumer goods showed up with a price increase of 7.4 percent compared to the previous year after 6.8 percent in April.

What's next in June?

Several political interventions are pending in Germany in June and it is at least possible that these could dampen inflation somewhat in the short term.

As of June 1st, the energy tax on fuel is to be reduced for three months, and there are also to be cheap 9-euro tickets for the train.

"The fuel discount and other interventions should ensure that the inflation rate in Germany does not continue to rise in the coming months," says economist Schmieding.

Jörg Krämer from Commerzbank calculates: "According to estimates by the federal government, the 9-euro ticket costs 2.5 billion euros - private households should be relieved by the same amount." Accordingly, the 9-euro ticket should reduce inflation in the three months of its validity by around half a percentage point, says the economist.

“If the petroleum companies pass the tax cut on petrol and diesel on to consumers, inflation should fall by around 0.4 percentage points,” he says: “All in all, the €9 ticket and the tax cuts on fuel should keep inflation down for three months long by almost one percentage point.”

How many consumers will benefit from the tax cut on petrol and diesel is still a matter of debate.

Fuel prices had recently risen again;

some said possibly preventively.

However, the price of crude oil had recently risen to $120 per barrel (159 liter barrel) of North Sea Brent.

At gas stations in Germany, a liter of diesel recently cost an average of 2.03 euros, and a liter of Super E10 around 2.13 euros.

The Federal Cartel Office, which is currently investigating pricing at the refineries, has announced that it will also keep a close eye on price developments related to the tax cut.

The ECB has announced higher interest rates

In purely arithmetical terms, the tax cut should mean that petrol will be 29.55 cents cheaper and diesel 14.04 cents cheaper per liter.

The then smaller bills would also mean less VAT, which together could mean a reduction in the price of petrol by 35.2 cents per liter and diesel by 16.7 cents per liter.

But: It is unclear whether and to what extent the oil companies will pass the tax cut on to consumers.

The economist Monika Schnitzer had examined this type of transfer process based on the temporary reduction in VAT in 2020.

She thinks: If the results are applied to the forthcoming tax cut, without the VAT effect and with all due caution about the comparability of the phenomena, petrol should become 15 cents cheaper and diesel 11 cents cheaper.

Monetary policy now also seems to want to react to the rise in inflation.

The European Central Bank (ECB) recently indicated that it would probably end bond purchases in June and intend to raise interest rates in July.

Next week, ECB President Christine Lagarde will present the central bank's new economic forecasts and give an outlook on the tightening plans for monetary policy until September.

It still seems controversial whether the first rate hike should be 0.25 or 0.5 percentage points.

Several ECB council members had recently spoken out in favor of 0.5 percentage points.

However, the head of the French central bank, François Villeroy de Galhau, had emphasized that there was still no consensus in the Governing Council.

ECB President Christine Lagarde recently said that negative interest rates should probably be abolished by the end of September, and the deposit rate could then be 0 percent – ​​or “slightly more”.